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Bernice Moore

JFK
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Posts posted by Bernice Moore

  1. Can anyone identify the person in this photo and determine what he is doing?

    How many photos are there?

    The DPD originally found some photos and one negative.

    How many photos and negatives are there?

    Michael Paine now says he saw one of these photos the very moment he met Oswald.

    Oswald's mom admitted she destroyed a copy after the assassination.

    DeMohrenschildt found one years later.

    A newspaper got a hold of one picture early on, and Life published another.

    One publication altered the photo, eliminating the scope for some reason.

    And the DPD tried to restage the photo and created more mystery.

    Now this Liebler photo surfaces.

    Who is that guy?

    And the Dartmouth Prof. says the photo is real.

    Which photo did he study?

    Did he ever apply his techniques to a photo that was known to have been altered to see if it works?

    BK

    I have been asked by William Kelly to post this photograph. It was found in a discarded suitcase owned by the late Wesley Liebler, Attorney on the Warren Commission.

    I FOUND THIS AND THE MANY THERe ALSO BILL WITHIN THE UNIV..POSTINGS OF THE DPD ARCHIVES.....I HAVEN'T A CLUE WHOM HE MAY BE..I HAVE BEEN CHECKING THE DPD PHOTOS..IT WAS JUST A THOUGHT..BUT NOTHING SO FAR.....HERE ARE SOME COPIES NOIICE WHAT SOME CALL THE DOG NOSE SEEN THROUGH THE FENCE THAT SOMEONE LEFT IN...I DO NOT KNOW NOW WHO MADE THE GIF BUT TO WHOMEVER MANY THANKS...B...IAN GRIGGS DID A VERY GOOD ARTICLE THAT EXPLAINS EACH AND EVERY FYI... http://www.jfklancer.com/byphotos.html )

    Thanks so much for posting that wonderful gif. It serves as yet another wonderful example of the total incompetence of the poster, the maker of the gif and of course Jack White who uses this technique so often.

    The unimpeachable truth is that you can't take two photos taken from different camera to subject distances, resize them to match and then compare sizes.

    Any claims made based on such flawed technique are swiftly discarded to the trash bin of stupidity.

    YOUR WELCOME CRAIG ALWAYS....I AND OTHERS ARE LOOKING FOWARD TO YOUR RESEACHED STUDIES POSTED HERE ON THE FORUM ON THE BACK YARD PHOTOS.....THANKS....B..

    KATHY'S THANKS FOR THE REPLIES...TAKE CARE ALL.......B :rolleyes:

    Ask away bernie, I'm be more than happy to school you. But somehow I don't think you could understand photographic truth if it hit you on the asp.

    We have to remember, bernie BELIEVES, lordy lordy bernie BELIEVES!

    In any case lets deal with the ignorance you have displayed in this thread by dealing with the resizing bullcrap you posted ( as "researched by Jack the Hack...the faulty resizing that is...he is clueless that he is wrong.)

    Here ya go, read it and weep. BTW, don't take my word for it, do the work yourself to verify. When shall we expect your admission that you are wrong (and White as well) bernie?

    This is photography 101, which is why WHITE got it wrong....

    it's upthread...

    http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.ph...mp;#entry174149

    THANKS FOR POSTING THE LINK CRAIGIE...AS I HAD LOOKED FOR YOUR BACKYARD PHOTO STUDIES BUT COULD NOT FIND THEM...AND STILL DID NOT THAT I FOUND WITHIN THE LINK..THOUGH I SHALL TAKE ANOTHER LOOK...BUT I DID SEE YOUR VERY GOOD PHOTO OF A NICE LOOKING KETTLE..THOUGH THERE WEREN'T ANY IN THE BACKYARD THAT DAY THAT WAS RAINY AND CLOUDY,,,AND MARGUERITE IS ALWAYS SUCH A GOOD READ..THOUGH IT REMINDED ME OF THE PHOTO ANOTHER BACKYARD THAT MARINA HAD IN HER SHOE AT THE PD STATION THAT SHE WASN'T QUITE SURE OF WHAT SHE DID WITH .THOUGH SHE THOUGHT SHE MAY HAVE GOTTEN RID OF IT......AND THOUGH SHE THOUGHT SHE MAY HAVE TAKEN THE PHOTOS FROM THE STAIRS....SHE SEEMED NOT TOO SURE ABOUT THAT EITHER THAT HARRY LIVINGSTONE HAS ON A TAPE RECORDED...SEEMS THE STORIES CHANGED SO MUCH DOWN THROUGH TIME....BUT THAT IS ALLRIGHT THEY ARE ALSO ENTITLED TO THEIR OPINIONS AS WE ALL ARE.....I DO NOT SUPPORT THE W/C NOR ANY GOV STUDIES AFTER ALL THE ERRORS THAT HAVE BEEN MADE WITHIN...YES I DO BELIEVE THEY NOT ONLY ALTERED EVIDENCE AND ALSO DESTROYED LOST AND SO ON.SUCH AS SOME OF THE LHO COLLECTED....EVIDENCE THAT WAS NOT ALL RETURNED TO THE DPD AFTER BEING TAKEN BY THE FBI.FROM DALLAS TO WASHINGTON.FUNNY THAT THEY NEVER RECEIVED ALL BACK....BUT I'LL GIVE MARINA CREDIT SHE DOES NOT BELIEVE THAT HER HUSBAND LHO KILLED ANYONE THAT DAY AND IS AN INNOCENT MAN...BUT SHE ALSO IS ENTITLED TO HER BELIEFS AS YOU ARE AS WELL...THANKS FOR THE COME BACK I AM OFF BACK TO THAT THREAD TO FIND YOUR BACKYARD PHOTOS AND STUDIES...TAKE CARE B..

    What the matter bernie, you so pissed at being wrong you had to shout your entire rant? LOL!

    Since there is nothing wrong with the backyard photos, no "studies" needed. Al thet is requireed is the simple applicatiopnof the basic photographic principles to toss all the "studies" byt hre bleivers into the trash bin of stupidity. You should understand that bernie, thats where your stuff ended up.

    But thankss again for showing everyone your decided lack of intellectual honesty. I really knew I could count on you not to admit your error!

    Hey did you hear the one about the pointed chin not being pointed because it was photographed from below, because the Imperial Reflex camera had a waist level finder? Oh of course not, your "dear leader" Jack the Hack could not figure that one out either....and since you need him to think for you in matters photographic, you too are clueless.

    Heck if all else fails perhaps you can do one of your famous cut and pastes of something else you don't understand.

    DEAR CRAIGIE...IF YOU WERE UP ON ALL AS YOU PRETEND TO BE ON THIS FOURM THEN YOU WOULD HAVE READ A POST IN THE UMBRELLAMAN THREAD WHERE I EXPLAINED OR TRIED TO THAT I HAVE OSTEO OF THE NECK BACK SHOULDERS AND ARMS AND HANDS AND IT IS MUCH EASIER FOR ME TO TYPE THIS WAY,..I WISH I COULD TYPE AS I DID BUT NOW CANNOT...SO PLEASE BEAR WITH ME....I MAKE NO BIG DEAL OUT OF IT SO ENOUGH SAID....THOUGH I DO WISH OTHERS WOULD NOT ...WHEN SOME MUST USE CAPITALS AS THERE ARE OTHERS REASONS THAT SOME MAY DO SO...OTHER THAN AS YOU THINK TO RANT......YOU MUST HAVE MISSED THAT AND THAT IS UNDRSTANDABLE... .....SO NO I WAS NOT NOR am i ranting at you.that you will not provoke IN ME....imo you aren't as good as you think YOU ARE...I DID EVERY PAGE WITHIN THE LINK THAT YOU PROVIDED AGAIN..AS I HAD WHEN IT TOOK PLACE....I DID NOT FIND YOUR STUDIES REGARDING SHOWING THE BACKYARD PHOTOS.AS BEING REAL......IF I DID MISS THEM PLEASE PROVIDE THE LINK NOT TO SIMPLY COMMENTS WITHIN THE THREAD.I WOULD LIKE TO SEE YOUR RESEARCH STUDIES..WITH PHOTOS THANKS.....I DID READ SO MANY TIMES IN THOSE THREADS THE ONGOING OPINION BY BOTH SIDES...THAT IT IS ALL THERE AND OUT THERE FOR PEOPLE TO STUDY AND COME TO THEIR OWN CONCLUSIONS.I DID AND HAVE DONE SO....I WOULD SUGGEST IF...YOU AND OTHERS READ THE POSTS ON PAGE 2 NUMBERS 22 AND 23http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.ph...mp;#entry174149

    .IN PARTICULAR...FOR IMO SOME COMMON SENSE....YOU APPARENTLY BELIEVE THE PHOTOS ARE REAL I DO NOT..THOUGH YOU DO NOT CARE ABOUT THE ASSASSINATION..AS YOU HAVE IMPLIED YOU ONLY ARE INTERESTED IN THE PHOTO STUDIES.WHICH IS FINE BUT.TO EACH THEIR OWN NEVER FORGET..AS I THINK YOU ARE DOING IMO.....TO ME THERE WAS A COVER-UP AND A PATSY MADE....BY MANIPULATING WHATEVER NEEDED TO BE ....AND THAT IS THAT.BUT CRAIGIE...DO TAKE CARE OUT THERE.....B...

  2. Can anyone identify the person in this photo and determine what he is doing?

    How many photos are there?

    The DPD originally found some photos and one negative.

    How many photos and negatives are there?

    Michael Paine now says he saw one of these photos the very moment he met Oswald.

    Oswald's mom admitted she destroyed a copy after the assassination.

    DeMohrenschildt found one years later.

    A newspaper got a hold of one picture early on, and Life published another.

    One publication altered the photo, eliminating the scope for some reason.

    And the DPD tried to restage the photo and created more mystery.

    Now this Liebler photo surfaces.

    Who is that guy?

    And the Dartmouth Prof. says the photo is real.

    Which photo did he study?

    Did he ever apply his techniques to a photo that was known to have been altered to see if it works?

    BK

    I have been asked by William Kelly to post this photograph. It was found in a discarded suitcase owned by the late Wesley Liebler, Attorney on the Warren Commission.

    I FOUND THIS AND THE MANY THERe ALSO BILL WITHIN THE UNIV..POSTINGS OF THE DPD ARCHIVES.....I HAVEN'T A CLUE WHOM HE MAY BE..I HAVE BEEN CHECKING THE DPD PHOTOS..IT WAS JUST A THOUGHT..BUT NOTHING SO FAR.....HERE ARE SOME COPIES NOIICE WHAT SOME CALL THE DOG NOSE SEEN THROUGH THE FENCE THAT SOMEONE LEFT IN...I DO NOT KNOW NOW WHO MADE THE GIF BUT TO WHOMEVER MANY THANKS...B...IAN GRIGGS DID A VERY GOOD ARTICLE THAT EXPLAINS EACH AND EVERY FYI... http://www.jfklancer.com/byphotos.html )

    Thanks so much for posting that wonderful gif. It serves as yet another wonderful example of the total incompetence of the poster, the maker of the gif and of course Jack White who uses this technique so often.

    The unimpeachable truth is that you can't take two photos taken from different camera to subject distances, resize them to match and then compare sizes.

    Any claims made based on such flawed technique are swiftly discarded to the trash bin of stupidity.

    YOUR WELCOME CRAIG ALWAYS....I AND OTHERS ARE LOOKING FOWARD TO YOUR RESEACHED STUDIES POSTED HERE ON THE FORUM ON THE BACK YARD PHOTOS.....THANKS....B..

    KATHY'S THANKS FOR THE REPLIES...TAKE CARE ALL.......B :rolleyes:

    Ask away bernie, I'm be more than happy to school you. But somehow I don't think you could understand photographic truth if it hit you on the asp.

    We have to remember, bernie BELIEVES, lordy lordy bernie BELIEVES!

    In any case lets deal with the ignorance you have displayed in this thread by dealing with the resizing bullcrap you posted ( as "researched by Jack the Hack...the faulty resizing that is...he is clueless that he is wrong.)

    Here ya go, read it and weep. BTW, don't take my word for it, do the work yourself to verify. When shall we expect your admission that you are wrong (and White as well) bernie?

    This is photography 101, which is why WHITE got it wrong....

    it's upthread...

    http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.ph...mp;#entry174149

    THANKS FOR POSTING THE LINK CRAIGIE...AS I HAD LOOKED FOR YOUR BACKYARD PHOTO STUDIES BUT COULD NOT FIND THEM...AND STILL DID NOT THAT I FOUND WITHIN THE LINK..THOUGH I SHALL TAKE ANOTHER LOOK...BUT I DID SEE YOUR VERY GOOD PHOTO OF A NICE LOOKING KETTLE..THOUGH THERE WEREN'T ANY IN THE BACKYARD THAT DAY THAT WAS RAINY AND CLOUDY,,,AND MARGUERITE IS ALWAYS SUCH A GOOD READ..THOUGH IT REMINDED ME OF THE PHOTO ANOTHER BACKYARD THAT MARINA HAD IN HER SHOE AT THE PD STATION THAT SHE WASN'T QUITE SURE OF WHAT SHE DID WITH .THOUGH SHE THOUGHT SHE MAY HAVE GOTTEN RID OF IT......AND THOUGH SHE THOUGHT SHE MAY HAVE TAKEN THE PHOTOS FROM THE STAIRS....SHE SEEMED NOT TOO SURE ABOUT THAT EITHER THAT HARRY LIVINGSTONE HAS ON A TAPE RECORDED...SEEMS THE STORIES CHANGED SO MUCH DOWN THROUGH TIME....BUT THAT IS ALLRIGHT THEY ARE ALSO ENTITLED TO THEIR OPINIONS AS WE ALL ARE.....I DO NOT SUPPORT THE W/C NOR ANY GOV STUDIES AFTER ALL THE ERRORS THAT HAVE BEEN MADE WITHIN...YES I DO BELIEVE THEY NOT ONLY ALTERED EVIDENCE AND ALSO DESTROYED LOST AND SO ON.SUCH AS SOME OF THE LHO COLLECTED....EVIDENCE THAT WAS NOT ALL RETURNED TO THE DPD AFTER BEING TAKEN BY THE FBI.FROM DALLAS TO WASHINGTON.FUNNY THAT THEY NEVER RECEIVED ALL BACK....BUT I'LL GIVE MARINA CREDIT SHE DOES NOT BELIEVE THAT HER HUSBAND LHO KILLED ANYONE THAT DAY AND IS AN INNOCENT MAN...BUT SHE ALSO IS ENTITLED TO HER BELIEFS AS YOU ARE AS WELL...THANKS FOR THE COME BACK I AM OFF BACK TO THAT THREAD TO FIND YOUR BACKYARD PHOTOS AND STUDIES...TAKE CARE B..

  3. Is there a single known image of LHO in a similar stance in another location and time? We're limited creatures with a small repertoire of poses.

    Even the photo of him as a cocky kid at the zoo doesn't work for me in context with the backyard photos.

    Today, posture, stance, and gait are all analytic indices to identifying photographed criminals.

    DAVID HERE ARE SOME OTHERS FOR YOU MAINLY TAKEN IN RUSSIA.FOR YOUR COMPARISONS...B...FWTW

  4. Can anyone identify the person in this photo and determine what he is doing?

    How many photos are there?

    The DPD originally found some photos and one negative.

    How many photos and negatives are there?

    Michael Paine now says he saw one of these photos the very moment he met Oswald.

    Oswald's mom admitted she destroyed a copy after the assassination.

    DeMohrenschildt found one years later.

    A newspaper got a hold of one picture early on, and Life published another.

    One publication altered the photo, eliminating the scope for some reason.

    And the DPD tried to restage the photo and created more mystery.

    Now this Liebler photo surfaces.

    Who is that guy?

    And the Dartmouth Prof. says the photo is real.

    Which photo did he study?

    Did he ever apply his techniques to a photo that was known to have been altered to see if it works?

    BK

    I have been asked by William Kelly to post this photograph. It was found in a discarded suitcase owned by the late Wesley Liebler, Attorney on the Warren Commission.

    I FOUND THIS AND THE MANY THERe ALSO BILL WITHIN THE UNIV..POSTINGS OF THE DPD ARCHIVES.....I HAVEN'T A CLUE WHOM HE MAY BE..I HAVE BEEN CHECKING THE DPD PHOTOS..IT WAS JUST A THOUGHT..BUT NOTHING SO FAR.....HERE ARE SOME COPIES NOIICE WHAT SOME CALL THE DOG NOSE SEEN THROUGH THE FENCE THAT SOMEONE LEFT IN...I DO NOT KNOW NOW WHO MADE THE GIF BUT TO WHOMEVER MANY THANKS...B...IAN GRIGGS DID A VERY GOOD ARTICLE THAT EXPLAINS EACH AND EVERY FYI... http://www.jfklancer.com/byphotos.html )

    Thanks so much for posting that wonderful gif. It serves as yet another wonderful example of the total incompetence of the poster, the maker of the gif and of course Jack White who uses this technique so often.

    The unimpeachable truth is that you can't take two photos taken from different camera to subject distances, resize them to match and then compare sizes.

    Any claims made based on such flawed technique are swiftly discarded to the trash bin of stupidity.

    YOUR WELCOME CRAIG ALWAYS....I AND OTHERS ARE LOOKING FOWARD TO YOUR RESEACHED STUDIES POSTED HERE ON THE FORUM ON THE BACK YARD PHOTOS.....THANKS....B..

    KATHY'S THANKS FOR THE REPLIES...TAKE CARE ALL.......B :rolleyes:

  5. Can anyone identify the person in this photo and determine what he is doing?

    How many photos are there?

    The DPD originally found some photos and one negative.

    How many photos and negatives are there?

    Michael Paine now says he saw one of these photos the very moment he met Oswald.

    Oswald's mom admitted she destroyed a copy after the assassination.

    DeMohrenschildt found one years later.

    A newspaper got a hold of one picture early on, and Life published another.

    One publication altered the photo, eliminating the scope for some reason.

    And the DPD tried to restage the photo and created more mystery.

    Now this Liebler photo surfaces.

    Who is that guy?

    And the Dartmouth Prof. says the photo is real.

    Which photo did he study?

    Did he ever apply his techniques to a photo that was known to have been altered to see if it works?

    BK

    I have been asked by William Kelly to post this photograph. It was found in a discarded suitcase owned by the late Wesley Liebler, Attorney on the Warren Commission.

    I FOUND THIS AND THE MANY THERe ALSO BILL WITHIN THE UNIV..POSTINGS OF THE DPD ARCHIVES.....I HAVEN'T A CLUE WHOM HE MAY BE..I HAVE BEEN CHECKING THE DPD PHOTOS..IT WAS JUST A THOUGHT..BUT NOTHING SO FAR.....HERE ARE SOME COPIES NOIICE WHAT SOME CALL THE DOG NOSE SEEN THROUGH THE FENCE THAT SOMEONE LEFT IN...I DO NOT KNOW NOW WHO MADE THE GIF BUT TO WHOMEVER MANY THANKS...B...IAN GRIGGS DID A VERY GOOD ARTICLE THAT EXPLAINS EACH AND EVERY FYI... http://www.jfklancer.com/byphotos.html )

  6. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    TRANSCRIPT OF INTERVIEW WITH MR. BRIAN MEE

    CONCERNING THE FAMOUS BACKYARD RIFLE PHOTOGRAPHS

    ------------

    Introduction

    ------------

    On Tuesday, 16 August, 1994, I met with Mr. Brian Mee in my home

    for the better part of three hours to discuss the famous backyard

    rifle photos, which seem to show Oswald wearing a pistol belt

    and holding a rifle in one hand and some radical newspapers

    in the other hand. There are three backyard photographs

    currently in evidence. They are labeled CE 133-A, B, and C.

    Each shows the Oswald figure in a different pose. Although the

    Dallas police said they found two negatives, one for A and one

    for B, only the B negative is known to exist. An important

    backyard snapshot was discovered in the late 1970s when the House

    Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) was conducting its

    investigation. This photo, known as 133-A, DeMohrenschildt, is

    much clearer than 133-A and was printed full negative.

    Prior to our interview, I supplied Mr. Mee with a 22-page extract

    from the file PHOTOS.ZIP, which at the time was available on

    CompuServe's JFK Assassination Forum. This file contains the

    HSCA testimony of two members of the Committee's photographic

    panel, Calvin S. McCamy and Cecil W. Kirk, who testified in

    defense of the backyard pictures. I also supplied Mr. Mee with

    sections on the photos from two books that dispute their

    authenticity.

    I had discussed the photos with Mr. Mee on one previous occasion,

    which was during our meeting of 8 August. That meeting was not

    recorded.

    In my 8 August meeting with Mr. Mee, I showed him Jack White's

    video FAKE: THE FORGED PHOTO THAT FRAMED OSWALD. We did not

    stop the video. We watched it all the way through. Then, once

    it was over, I asked him about some of the points made therein.

    In our 16 August meeting, we viewed about a dozen selected

    segments from White's video. We did so one segment at a time.

    In several instances, we reviewed a certain portion four or five

    or more times, and then stopped to discuss it at length before

    continuing. Of course, we also discussed in considerable detail

    the 22-page extract of Kirk and McCamy's testimony.

    Our meeting ran about 2 hours and 55 minutes, give or take a

    minute or two. I recorded all but about 15 minutes of it on

    audio cassettes. I had obtained two 60-minute tapes and one 30-

    minute tape for the interview, never thinking that it would even

    go beyond two hours. A few of those not-recorded 15

    minutes were due to my not releasing the "Pause" button on my

    recorder after I had paused the tape while we viewed a video

    segment. (At times, however, I let the tape run while we

    viewed a video segment.) The remaining unrecorded minutes

    occurred toward the end of our meeting, when I ran out of

    cassette tape. When this happened, I took notes. At the end

    of the interview, Mr. Mee reviewed my notes from the unrecorded

    portion, and he stated that they accurately reflected what he

    had said.

    I should make it clear at the outset that we did not examine

    copies directly from the National Archives. Of course, we did

    not study the original photos and the 133-B negative either.

    Just about the first thing Mr. Mee asked me when he came through

    the door was if I had access to the originals, and if I had my

    own copies from the National Archives. Mr. Mee stated that in

    some cases he would be unable to provide a firm judgment due to

    the nature of the copies we had available to examine.

    I will say, though, that in his video White uses copies of good-

    quality reproductions of the backyard photos that he obtained

    from the National Archives. I used the freeze-frame function on

    my VCR and also made several long video segments of the photos

    from Jack White's video. We viewed these on my 19-inch color TV,

    which has a very high-quality picture. Additionally, I made

    available to Mr. Mee an enlarged copy of 133-A from a fairly good

    reproduction in Matthew Smith's book JFK: THE SECOND PLOT. Our

    other source for copies of the backyard photographs was Robert

    Groden's book THE KILLING OF A PRESIDENT. Mr. Mee felt that in

    several cases the copies I was able to show him enabled him to

    reach firm conclusions. On the other hand, as mentioned above,

    he also made it clear that he could not provide a firm opinion on

    certain issues due to the nature of these copies and to his not

    being able to view the original materials.

    For the sake of convenience and organization, I placed subject

    headings in the 22-page extract that I provided to Mr. Mee.

    All testimony from PHOTOS.ZIP pertaining to these subjects

    was included. The headings were as follows: "On Using Frame Edge

    Markings and Scratches for Authentication"; "Frame Edge Markings

    on 133-A (DeM) and the 133-B Negative"; "Imperial Reflex

    Scratches on the Backyard Photos"; "Photogrammetry and the

    Backyard Photos"; "Lines in the Chin Area?"; "The Shape of the

    Chin"; "Varying Exposure Analysis and Faked Shadows"; "Digital

    Image Processing"; "Nose Shadow vs. Body and Rifle Shadows";

    "Duplicating the Nose Shadow?"; "Change of Expression?";

    "Backyard Measurements and Stereo Pairs"; "Answering Jack White";

    "General Comments"; "McCamy on the Possibility of Fakery."

    Mr. Mee stated that the opinions he expressed were his own, and

    that he was not speaking on behalf of any government agency.

    The reader will notice that during the interview I read several

    lengthy sections from Kirk and McCamy's testimony. I explained

    to Mr. Mee before we went on tape that I would be reading

    extensively from the extract in order to provide those who

    would read this transcript with the necessary context and

    background.

    There is one issue about which I would like to further consult

    with Mr. Mee, and that is his theory of how the backyard photos

    could have been faked. In explaining his theory, he drew

    diagrams and referred to them throughout his explanation. This

    was the only point in our interview when I wished I had video

    taped it as well as audio taped it. The reader might find it

    somewhat hard to follow Mr. Mee's explanation without being able

    to see the diagrams to which he was referring. I should say,

    however, that I think one can still get the general idea of what

    Mr. Mee was saying on this subject. Nevertheless, in reading the

    explanation of his theory, some follow-up questions occur to me

    that I will be asking him in the near future. I am certain he

    will answer them, and when he does I will post his answers as a

    supplement to this transcript.

    Following my interview with Mr. Mee, I spoke with other

    professional photographers and photo lab technicians, as well as

    with serious, experienced amateur photographers. They did not

    know that the questions they were answering were related to the

    Kennedy assassination. I posed my questions in relation to a

    hypothetical photo of a doll in someone's yard. When it came to

    the issue of water spots and the nearly straight line that

    runs across Oswald's chin, I simply asked what the chances

    were that the edge of a water spot would form a nearly straight

    line. Some of the people with whom I consulted included the

    following:

    * Mr. Konrad Mandl, a professional photographer and photo

    lab technician, and a certified member of the British Institute

    of Professional Photography.

    * Miss Davette Johnson, a professional photographer and photo

    lab technician, and a computer graphics technician.

    * Mr. Jerry Finzi, professional photographer

    * Mr. Mark Loundy, professional photographer.

    * Mr. Arthur Kramer, a professional photographer who has taught

    photography at the collegiate level. In addition, Mr. Kramer

    wrote a column for MODERN PHOTOGRAPHY magazine for 20 years

    called "The View from Kramer."

    * Mr. Steven Newbould, a photo lab technician at the Harrogate

    Photographic Laboratories, Harrogate, England.

    All of the professionals and serious amateurs with whom I spoke

    corroborated Mr. Mee's views on the issues about which I asked

    them.

    For example, Mr. Mee expressed considerable skepticism about the

    photographic panel's claim that the irregular line across the

    chin was actually the edge of a water spot. This line is nearly

    straight, and Mr. Mee said this was one of the reasons that he

    doubted the panel's assertion. Miss Johnson told me that in all

    her years in photography she had never seen the edge of a water

    spot form a nearly straight line. Mr. Mandl said it would be

    unusual for the edge of a water spot to form a nearly straight

    line. Similarly, Mr. Kramer stated that such an occurrence would

    be "unlikely."

    Mr. Mee disputed the photographic panel's claim that a vanishing

    point analysis could explain the conflicting shadows in the

    backyard photos. I did not discuss this subject with Miss

    Johnson or Mr. Mandl, but I did question my other photographic

    sources on the issue, and their responses were quite revealing.

    I asked them if a vanishing point analysis could explain why the

    facial and body shadows on my hypothetical doll did not fall in

    the same direction. I asked them to assume that the facial

    shadows fell straight down, but that the body shadows fell off in

    approximately a ten o'clock position (which is what we see in the

    backyard snapshots). Every single one of them insisted that the

    described shadow variations were not possible without two

    different light sources, and none of them expressed the view

    that the variant shadows could be explained by a vanishing point

    analysis.

    Mr. Mee said that the film grain patterns in the backyard photos

    could have been matched if the forger knew what he was doing and

    took care to match the film speed. Mr. Mandl agreed that a

    skillful forger could match film grain patterns in a composite

    picture. Mr. Newbould said he believed that grain patterns could

    be matched in a fake photo, but he added that he wanted more

    information before commenting further on my question. Mr. Mandl

    and Mr. Newbould were the only two persons that I asked to

    comment on this topic.

    ------------------------

    Mr. Mee's Qualifications

    ------------------------

    Mr. Mee is a Depart of Defense (DOD) photographer and photo lab

    technician. He has worked in photography for 18 years. He has

    been a DOD photographer and photo lab technician for 10 years.

    Among other things, Mr. Mee has studied and had on-the-job

    training in negative retouching, print development, shadows,

    and negative analysis.

    In addition, he has had technical courses in color print

    development and color negative development at the Winona School

    of Photography, which is affiliated with the Professional

    Photographers of America School. He has also had courses in

    automatic printing and in using computer video analyzers at the

    KODAK School of Photography in Rochester, New York.

    -----------------------

    Transcript of Interview

    -----------------------

    [Mr. Mee and MTG watch a segment on the DeMohrenschildt photo

    from Jack White's video FAKE: THE FORGED PHOTO THAT FRAMED LEE

    HARVEY OSWALD. The segment is about the DeMohrenschildt photo

    and how its superior detail and clarity indicate that it was

    taken with a different, better camera.]

    MTG. All right, the thing about the DeMohrenschildt photo not

    being a copy of 133-A because it has much better detail and a

    larger background. Does that make sense?

    MR. MEE. It wouldn't be a copy of 133-A if it had more detail

    because, if anything, the reverse would be true, since you always

    lose, you never gain, when you copy something. You lose detail,

    definition, and contrast is built up. You start to lose your

    gray tones, which hold most of your detail, and it starts to go

    into shadow or [tape unclear]. So, it wouldn't be a copy.

    The DeMohrenschildt photo would not be a copy of 133-A.

    MTG. Could it have been printed off of the negative of 133-A,

    even though it has better contrast and everything? I mean, Jack

    White seems to think that because the DeMohrenschildt photo

    has such better quality, that it must have been made with a

    better camera. Is it logical to assume that it was taken with

    a better camera?

    MR. MEE. There are two possibilities that come to mind. That is

    one of them--that it was done with a better camera. The other

    one is that it was an earlier copy of the negative and that 133-A

    is a second- or third-generation copy. To say that the

    DeMohrenschildt photo was done with a better quality camera is

    possible, and, it is likely, in this situation, the more probable

    of the two choices.

    MTG. Let me just see how we're sounding so far.

    [Audio tape is stopped, rewound some, and then played back to

    check sound quality. Mr. Mee and MTG then watch Jack White video

    segment on how the frame edge markings and scratches could have

    been produced.]

    MTG. Your comments on that?

    MR. MEE. One comment is on the theory that you an oval cutout

    area was filled in with a figure. Cutting an oval out and then

    inserting a body and then a head--I think that would be just too

    difficult to accomplish without leaving tell-tale signs. You're

    allowing too many areas where your tampering can be detected.

    You're multiplying your suspected area by a whole bunch, as

    opposed to just putting the head on and [tape unclear]. That

    would be a little bit easier to do. That could be done. But

    when you have to retouch such a large area, I think that would be

    picked up. It would leave too many tell-tale signs. I wouldn't

    really agree with that.

    MTG. So, then, the first way that White suggested, of making an

    exposure with just the edge markings on it, and then combining

    this with the composite photo. . . .

    MR. MEE. Yes, that could be done. It's feasible to do something

    like that. The process of the sandwiching, though, might be a

    little difficult to hide. This is not to say that it couldn't

    be done, but then you'd be dealing with another negative and

    probably with different characteristics.

    But, the idea that a negative was shot that just had the edge

    markings on it, and only the edge markings--something like that

    would be difficult to achieve.

    If you took the film and wound it across the IR camera without

    making an exposure, and then developed that negative, you'd have

    a clear type of, well, what we call an overlay, which you could

    combine with a picture, instead of actually shooting any type of

    picture through the IR camera. You see, otherwise, as soon as

    you--even with the cap on--as soon as you open that up, you're

    still going to get some type of traces of a different negative.

    Now you could sandwich them together, and, again, we're talking

    about making a print, and then working with that print and then

    copying it. So that's a possibility. Something along those

    lines. I wouldn't go so far as to say that's how they did it,

    but it could have been done in this fashion.

    MTG. So they, possibly, took some film, dragged it across the

    film plane aperture, but did not snap a picture? Then, they

    took the film out and that would have given them an overlay?

    MR. MEE. Yes, that would give you an acetate overlay, a clear

    film. Once you develop it, since it hasn't been struck by

    light, it will come out clear. So then, you could place your

    composite onto the acetate overlay and make a print and then copy

    the print with a different camera. It would be possible to do

    that.

    MTG. So what would. . . .

    MR. MEE. But there's one thing: Keep in mind that if you

    copied the print with the IR, you would have multiple streaks and

    edge marks. And you would probably have a shadowing type of

    effect, or a ghosting type of effect, where you'd get one and

    then another one close by. Even if they had tried to drag the

    film through the camera again exactly as they had done before, I

    think you would still be able to pick up slight variations in the

    marks with a microscope.

    MTG.. Okay.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the fact

    that the photographic panel omitted the nose, earlobe, and chin

    measurements in the backyard photos from its Penrose study.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR.. MEE. Just pretty much what I said last time. You don't do

    that kind of a study and then leave out relevant measurements.

    I'm surprised that the chin measurement wasn't considered. The

    guys on that panel knew that the chin in these pictures was a

    disputed area, according to the other articles that you gave me.

    MTG. Oh, yes. They knew. The chin had been disputed for a long

    time before that.

    MR. MEE. Uh-huh. Well, that just makes it harder to understand

    how they could have left it out when they did their calculations.

    MTG. Could they have done this because the chin, and the other

    things, threw off the total measurements too much?

    MR. MEE. Let me put it this way: I don't know what they would

    have left out ANY measurements, especially the chin, of all

    things.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG then view Jack White video segment on the

    idea that the DeMohrenschildt photo was somehow produced without

    the IR camera negative, and that the backyard photos could have

    been made prior to being made with the IR camera.]

    MTG. Any comments on that?

    MR. MEE. It's quite possible.

    MTG. So the DeMohrenschildt picture indicates that the backyard

    photos could have been made before they were made with the IR

    camera and that a better camera was used? I mean. . . .

    MR. MEE. I think I know what you're getting at. When you

    start talking about high-quality cameras, you're talking about

    the lens not as much as the camera, and you would use a high-

    quality lens to copy things, because you want to try to reduce

    the aberrations and the contrasts, and all the things that go

    with an inferior-quality lens when you're copying. You're

    already losing something. You don't want to lose anything else.

    So you use the best type of lens that you can get. So, that's

    consistent with what would be normal practice if you had a

    picture that was being worked on. You would copy that picture

    with a more expensive camera, to preserve as much of the quality

    as possible.

    And, with the edge markings, you're talking about more of an

    original type of negative, or rather an original type of a print

    from a full negative. That's not to say that would be

    the original print, or the original negative. You could take

    a print and copy it, and you would still get the edge markings,

    but it would be printed full negative, as in the case of the

    DeMohrenschildt photo. That would be the only difference,

    whereas with the other pictures you might not be seeing the

    full print.

    During that time [the 1960s], they would do a certain amount of

    cropping on the edges. This is done quite often with automatic

    printers. You'll look at the picture and say, "Wait a second.

    Why is this person's hand cut off, when I can see it on the

    negative?" So that's pretty customary.

    MTG. How much of the picture on the negative would one usually

    expect to be cropped? I mean, like, if you were going to give a

    percentage, would you say it would be cropped 20 percent? Ten

    percent?

    MR. MEE. Well, you can't really say, because it depends on the

    format. It depends on a lot of factors. It depends on the

    machine you're using. It depends on the enlarger you're using,

    and the operator who's using it. It gets back to format.. For

    example, say you've got a 35mm negative. To get a 35mm print,

    full negative--for instance in a 7 X 10. . . . [pauses] But most

    people don't have 7 X 10 frames; they have 8 X 10 frames. So,

    what has to happen is that it has to be blown up so that the 7

    goes to an 8, but then you have to cut off the edges. In that

    situation, you would cut off about 20 percent of the picture. So

    that's one example of how cropping can come into play. There are

    a lot of variables. It's hard to say.

    MTG. Okay. So now. . . .

    MR. MEE. I would say that normally, when you're copying a

    picture, you'll want to crop in enough to where you can't see the

    edging. Your attempt is to try to get in as much of the original

    picture as possible, if you're trying to get the fullest picture

    possible without the edging.

    To get in as much as possible, you'd cut it really close. You'd

    want to crop it enough so that you couldn't see whatever was on

    the edges. You wouldn't want to be able to see the edging of the

    picture which has a texture and has fibers in it.

    MTG. Before we move on to other areas, am I right in saying

    that it is your position that the presence of the frame edge

    markings and the scratches alone is not absolute proof of the

    backyard photos' authenticity?

    MR. MEE. Right. I'm not convinced that those markings prove

    that the photos weren't doctored.

    MTG. Okay. The next area, then.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on Oswald's

    expression in the backyard photos. White's view is that the

    person in the picture could not have gone from the smile

    to the frown without noticeably moving surrounding facial

    muscles.]

    MTG. Any comments on that?

    MR. MEE. Well, I don't think that's a significant piece of

    evidence. Every person is different. The degree that you're

    smiling or frowning can be ever so subtle. The facial muscles

    don't have to change that much. They [the other muscles]

    wouldn't necessarily be noticed in these photographs.

    Granted, if he had a big grin, it would change a lot of different

    things. It would change smile lines, the way the light hits him,

    what kinds of shadows would be created. Or, if he had a big

    frown. The difference in expression in those two photographs

    appears to be ever so slight, but it's hard to tell without

    looking at enlargements of the originals. It's possible that the

    frown or the smile was retouched. Both could have been

    retouched.

    MTG. The HSCA photographic panel said that the different

    expressions--the smile and the frown--showed that this was not

    the same head pasted onto separate photographs.

    MR. MEE. Right. Well, it's possible that the mouth was

    retouched. The heads in the photos could be the same head. But,

    I don't think that that argument alone is a strong argument for

    saying that the same head appears in all the photos. There are

    other things that are more compelling as evidence that the same

    head was used. The mouth could have been retouched.

    Or, there could have been more than one photograph taken of his

    [Oswald's] head, and then those pictures could have been used in

    the photos. You could use two heads just as easily as you could

    use one. But that wouldn't change the problems with the lighting

    characteristics, the shadows. If two photos of the head were

    used, they were photographed in one setting, and with the head in

    the same position in each picture.

    MTG. Right. Oh, by the way, it's interesting that Kirk and

    McCamy criticized Jack White's use of overlays, but in order to

    detect the smile and the frown they themselves used overlays.

    MR. MEE. Yeah. [Mr. Mee smiles noticeably as he says this.]

    MTG. Okay, let's see. Where's my copy of the extract? Oh, yes.

    I'd like to ask you about the two other things that were

    mentioned as evidence that the same head was not used, namely the

    differences in the eyes and the puffing of the lower lip in the

    frown. The argument is that this is more evidence that the

    heads aren't all the same.

    MR. MEE. Well, you could make that argument. I'm not ruling out

    the possibility that two heads were used. The differences in the

    eyes would indicate that more than one photo of the head was

    used. But, from looking at these photographs here, it's hard for

    me to tell. [Mr.. Mee points to the mouth and the eyes, and then

    pauses to examine the photos.]

    Could we look at that segment again? What I want to see is that

    part that shows the head enlarged.

    MTG. Sure.

    [The portion of the video segment showing the head enlargements

    is replayed twice. Mr. Mee then looks at the book copies of the

    photos again.]

    MR. MEE. I can see a slight difference in the eyes. But, you

    can't say that these things couldn't have been retouched either.

    I really wish. . . .

    MTG. Including the. . . . Oh, I'm sorry.

    MR. MEE. No, go ahead.

    MTG. Including the eyes? The eyes could have been retouched?

    MR. MEE. The eyes could have been retouched. But, on the other

    hand, when you're looking at a negative, and you're trying to

    determine which photo goes with which negative, one of the things

    you look for is the subtlety of the smile, because it can change,

    ever so slightly. So, it's possible that more than one

    photograph of Oswald's head was used.

    It's hard to tell from the pictures I'm looking at here. If I

    had the originals, I could make a better determination. After

    looking at the enlargements on the video, and at all these

    copies [of the photos] again, my guess would be that two pictures

    of the head were used, and that the head was photographed at

    around noon. But, when the one head was put on at a tilt, the

    nose and eye shadows were overlooked. That [the idea that two

    head pictures were used] would be the more logical assumption.

    But, again, this isn't to say that the mouth and eyes couldn't

    have been retouched enough to create these differences. I'd

    really have to look at the originals.

    MTG. Okay. McCamy also brought up the fact that the lower

    lip. . . .

    [side one of the first tape runs out. The tape is flipped over

    and reinserted into the recorder.]

    MTG. Okay. We got cut off there. I was going to ask you about

    the puffing out of the lower lip.

    MR. MEE. Yes. That really doesn't say a whole lot in terms of

    whether or not there's been retouching or if more than one photo

    of the head was used.

    MTG. Okay. I've got another segment I'd like to show you.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the stance

    of the figure in the backyard photos.]

    MTG. Okay. The problem with the center of weight and also with

    the stance when the figure is reversed--any comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, I'm not sure exactly what Mr. White's trying to

    say by pointing this out. Granted, the figure is standing there

    in an awkward position, regardless of the head. The head here

    doesn't seem to have any bearing on how this person is standing.

    Maybe that's what he's trying to point out.

    But the nature of photography is that you're catching the subject

    in an instant. And to say that people stand or walk around all

    the time in complete balance is not feasible. We see people off

    balance in photographs all the time. He [the figure in the

    backyard photos] could have been shifting his weight, or starting

    to walk, or taking a step backwards. There are a lot of

    different things that he could have done to make his stance look

    odd. It does look odd, mind you. Certainly it does look odd.

    But I don't know that you can say that the stance is not natural.

    MTG. What about the claim that the figure's center of gravity

    lies outside his weight-bearing foot? If this is actually the

    case, what would that mean?

    MR. MEE. Well, to me it is a moot point. People don't always

    stand perfectly balanced. You see this all the time. I don't

    know exactly what the suggestion is here. If it's that the body

    was retouched in some way, I'd have a problem with that. I don't

    know why, if someone went to such lengths to fake these

    photographs--I don't know why they would need to retouch the legs

    or the upper body.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the conflicting

    body shadows.]

    MR. MEE. Can we watch that segment again?

    [Video segment is shown several times.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, something is definitely wrong with the body

    shadows. I don't see quite the difference that Mr. White does,

    but I do see a difference. I don't know that I would say that

    one body shadow is right at ten o'clock and that the other one is

    right at twelve o'clock.

    MTG. Well, I think he's phrasing the differences in terms

    of approximations. In other words, he's not saying that one's in

    a perfect ten o'clock position and that the other's right at a

    twelve o'clock position. Let's watch the segment again.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    [Video segment is reviewed again.]

    MTG. You see what I mean?

    MR. MEE. Right. Okay. And, as I said, I can see that there's a

    difference in the body shadows. They seem to have been made

    at different times of the day.

    Now, if I you wanted to make every possible allowance for body

    movement or camera movement, or both, I could see how you could

    perhaps say that the time difference between these pictures was a

    matter of minutes, several minutes, as far as when the body

    shadows were made. I could see how you could reach this

    conclusion.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. Now, the shadows cast by the head and the neck in

    133-A--they look odd to me.

    MTG. How so?

    MR. MEE. Well, the shadow of the neck looks too narrow. And the

    head--I don't know if its shadow should angle off that much, when

    it doesn't do that in B or C. The shadow cast by the neck is

    thicker in B and C too.. These could be real shadows, mind you,

    but they do look a little off to me.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. It's hard to say, though. It would really help if I

    could look at the originals. Again, they could be real shadows.

    I'm just saying that looking at them here, they do seem a little

    strange.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the fact that

    in 133-C the body shadow runs up onto the fence, whereas the

    body shadows in A and B don't.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, to say that these photographs were taken within

    seconds of each other, I think, is impossible. There's just too

    much variance in the directions in the body shadows. They [the

    body shadows] have definitely changed positions.

    Now, about that C photograph--and, again, this is without looking

    at the original--but what could cause that [the shadow running up

    onto the fence] would be if the figure were a little farther

    back. You've got to consider any lean, too. The weight shift

    here [in 133-C], so that he's leaning back more, could cause

    the shadow to go up onto the fence.. It wouldn't take that much

    of a shift or lean to make it go up onto the fence. I don't

    think that's an unreasonable amount. I mean, you can see this

    for yourself by standing in front of a bright light. You can see

    how much you can change the length of your shadow just by leaning

    a little bit.

    MTG. Okay. So the body shadow on the fence, that is, the head

    going up onto the fence, could be due to a slight shift or lean?

    MR. MEE. Right. And, by the way, I think the suggestion that

    two different people were used, wearing the same clothes, is

    really unlikely. I don't think they would have used two

    different bodies, especially ones that were different heights.

    MTG. Right. That makes sense.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the blurriness

    of the right-hand fingers in 133-A.]

    MTG. Okay. On the blurriness of the fingers on his right hand.

    MR. MEE. Well, yeah, that's the way it appears. But that could

    have been caused by a couple different things. He could have

    been moving that hand. Or, light might have been reflecting off

    the newspaper and into the shadow areas of the hand, which would

    take away some of the detail around the fingers. If his hand

    were slightly angled, just ever so slightly, and with the

    reflection from the newspaper, that would make the fingers look

    stubby too. Those are more likely possibilities. I don't know

    why a retouch artist would have tampered with anything in that

    area.

    MTG. Yeah, you'd think they would have had the guy just hold the

    newspapers, and so they wouldn't have to do any retouching there.

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Okay. Now, in this next segment. . . . Well, let's take

    a look at it.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on White's finding

    that when he enlarged the figure in 133-A to match Oswald's

    height of 5 feet 9 inches, the length of the rifle was too long,

    and that when be brought the rifles to the same size, to match

    the alleged murder weapon's official size of 40.2 inches, the

    figure appeared to be six inches too short.]

    MTG. Okay. What are your thoughts on this?

    MR. MEE. The person's height could be different, and that would

    be another indication of fraud in these photos. I don't know

    why they would have used a stand-in who was so much shorter than

    Oswald, though. You'd think they would have gotten someone who

    was about Oswald's height.

    MTG. Along that line, one of the Oswald impersonators was

    said by two or three witnesses to be quite a bit shorter than

    Oswald.

    MR. MEE. Huh. That's interesting. Well, I'd have to examine

    Mr. White's methodology more closely before I reached any

    conclusions here, though. When you're doing these kinds of

    comparisons, you've got to figure in other factors, like

    whether or not there was any tilting of the camera, how the

    person was standing, the relationship to other objects in the

    picture, that sort of thing. But. . . .

    MTG. Does the figure look like it's leaning or tilted very much?

    MR. MEE. Well, I was just about to say that the figure doesn't

    look like he's leaning to the point that it would be that hard to

    determine the height.. He appears to be standing pretty much

    straight up. Now, you don't know exactly how the camera was

    being held, but I wouldn't guess that it was held way off

    balance, to look at these pictures.

    [Phone rings. Tape recorder is placed on pause. After MTG

    hangs up the phone, the interview is resumed but the recorder is

    accidentally left on pause. After about a minute, MTG realizes

    that tape recorder is still on pause.]

    MTG. Okay. We had a little snafu there. Let me ask you

    this again. What is your opinion of Jack White's work overall?

    MR. MEE. Well, overall, I'd say it's pretty good. I don't agree

    with some of it. I think he's reading too much into certain

    things. But, in general, I think he's on the right track. I

    mean, from everything I've seen so far, from all the copies and

    everything that I've looked at so far, I would say he's made some

    valid arguments.

    MTG. Well, you know that British photographic expert mentioned

    in the video, Jeffrey Crowley, looked at White's work and was

    quite impressed with it.

    MR. MEE. Uh-huh. Yeah, I remember that. I mean, the guy [Jack

    White] does make some mistakes, but overall he makes a pretty

    good case.

    MTG. Okay. Fair enough.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view the Jack White video segment on the

    conflict between the backyard figure's chin and Oswald's chin,

    and on the line that goes from one side of the neck, across the

    chin, to the other side of the neck.]

    MTG. Okay. I think I'll bracket the issue of the shape of the

    chin. I've got a lot of pictures of Oswald, going clear back

    into his junior high or high school days, and they all show him

    with a sharp, cleft chin. I know in his testimony, McCamy said

    he found some pictures of Oswald as a youth in which his chin was

    a little broader and slightly flat. Even Congressman Fithian

    wasn't convinced, and I haven't found that to be the case at all

    in the photos that I have of Oswald as a youth. This isn't the

    issue anyway, since the backyard photos supposedly show Oswald

    as an adult. And all the photos of Oswald as an adult show

    him with a sharp, cleft chin. I'd like to return to the

    issue of the chin later when we discuss McCamy's claim that

    the edge of the chin disappears in shadow.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. I'd also like to hold off on discussing the line across

    the chin until we review McCamy's argument that it was caused

    by a water spot. All right?

    MR. MEE. That's fine.

    MTG. I just wanted to show you that segment to provide some

    background for when we get to those issues in a few minutes.

    MR. MEE. All right.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the conflicts

    between the nose shadow and the neck and body shadows, and

    on the non-movement of the nose shadow even when the head is

    tilted.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, I think this is the area where you get into the

    most convincing evidence that these photographs have been

    doctored--the lighting characteristics. You can see in these

    photographs that the nose and eye shadows do not match the neck

    shadow. They don't match the shadow that falls down from the

    body either. They don't match. We only have one sun, and that's

    the problem. Even if we had two suns, their light still could

    not produce the differences in the shadows in the backyard

    photos. And I think that all the things that that panel [the

    photographic panel] cited to substantiate these photos aren't

    nearly as important as the shadow characteristics.

    MTG. I was going to ask you about that later, but as long

    as we're on the subject. . . . Now, McCamy, instead of dealing

    with the problems in the shadows themselves, appealed to a

    vanishing point analysis. He never actually got around to

    explaining why the nose and eye shadows drop straight down,

    while, on the other hand, you have a big patch of light on the

    left side of the neck; and why you have the body shadows in A and

    C falling at about a ten o'clock position. Instead, of dealing

    head-on with those problems, he appealed to a vanishing point

    analysis. We'll get into this more later, but for right now I'd

    like to ask you if you think that an analysis of that kind can

    overrule what you're able to see in the photos themselves as far

    as the contrasting shadows?

    MR. MEE. No, not at all. The shadows themselves, the different

    angles that they show, their shape, the areas that they should

    cover but don't--these have got to be dealt with directly. No

    form of analysis is going to convince me that those shadows are

    not different shadow groups.

    MTG. Okay. Now. . . .

    MR. MEE. Let me give you a little background on why I say this.

    There are a lot of ways to alter shadows in photography. But in

    this situation, where the figure was outdoors, during the day,

    and where there was only one light source, there is just no way

    that all the shadows in these photos could have occurred at the

    same time of day.

    Now, it could be argued that the reason there is more light on

    the neck in 133-A is that you're getting a reflection off the

    newspaper, but in B and C the newspaper is out to the side,

    and. . . .

    MTG. The patch of light is still there. . . .

    MR. MEE. It's still there. It's still consistent. And that

    shouldn't be. Most of the neck on both sides should be in

    shadow, to be consistent with the eye and nose shadows.

    And the nose shadow should not stay in that V-shape, coming

    straight down onto the upper lip, when the head is tilted. Now,

    with the tilt of the head here, you wouldn't see a big difference

    in the nose shadow, but you would see some difference. The shape

    and the angle would change. It [the nose shadow] shouldn't look

    like that with the head tilted.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on two unnatural

    bulges in the backyard photos, one in the neck in 133-A and the

    other in the post in 133-B, and on the fact that these bulges are

    parallel to each other.]

    MR. MEE. Can we see that again?

    [Video segment is replayed several times.]

    MTG. On the bulges. Any comments on the bulges and on the fact

    that they're parallel to each other? Could it be that a

    retoucher might have goofed on the neck, spotted it, and then

    decided to move the goof to the post in the hope that if he

    moved it to a background image it would be less noticeable?

    MR. MEE. Even good retouchers sometimes make small errors. I

    can see the bulges. I can see what he's [Mr. White's] talking

    about here. This goes along with the theory that these are

    composite photographs and that they would have required

    retouching.

    MTG. Now, in the photographic panel's report. . . . Well, the

    panel apparently had a hard time explaining the bulge in the

    post. The theory that the panel put in writing was that the

    indentation was an optical illusion caused by the shadow of a

    twig. . . .

    [side two of the first tape runs out. Tape is removed, and

    another tape is placed in the tape recorder.]

    MTG. Okay. Let's go over that again. I'm going to read

    the explanation given by the photographic panel:

    What could be perceived as an indentation in the

    post in CE 133-B is believed by the undersigned to

    be an illusion resulting from the location of a

    shadow of a branch or a leaf along the edge of the

    post.

    Okay, and you said you have a problem with that.

    MR. MEE. Well, the problem I have with that, keeping in mind

    the angle of the body shadows and others, is that a branch or a

    leaf here would have been struck by sun coming from around a four

    o'clock position. Therefore, a branch or leaf shadow here would

    fall in about a ten or eleven o'clock position, and so I don't

    think the bulge here could have resulted from a natural shadow.

    With the sun coming in from a four o'clock angle, I don't see how

    that bulge could have been caused by the shadow from a branch or

    a leaf. The angle's not right. Can we look at the part about

    this in the video again?

    MTG. Sure..

    [Video segment is replayed. Afterwards, Mr. Mee then examines

    the book and xeroxed copies of the photos again.]

    MR. MEE. No, I don't see how that bulge could have been caused

    by a shadow from a branch or a leaf. I don't see it. The shadow

    angle would be wrong. The sun's in the wrong position to do

    that. I'd like to see the originals, though. For a small detail

    like this, you want to look at the original photos.. But from

    what I can see here, I really don't think this bulge was caused

    by any kind of a branch or a leaf shadow--not with the sun

    shining the way it is in these pictures.

    What about the bulge in the neck? How do they explain it? I

    didn't see that discussed anywhere in the extract.

    MTG. No, Kirk and McCamy didn't deal with that. There's nothing

    about it in that file [PHOTOS.ZIP]. I don't know if the panel's

    report deals with it either. I don't think the panel tried to

    explain it.. If they had offered an explanation, I think Groden

    and Livingstone would have tried to answer it. I could be wrong,

    though. It's kind of hard to believe they wouldn't have tried to

    explain this, but I don't know. I still haven't gotten a copy of

    the panel's report. So I really don't know.

    MR. MEE. Okay. Well, that neck bulge needs to be explained. It

    doesn't look natural, and it's parallel to the bulge in the post.

    It disappears in 133-B, but then you have an indentation in the

    post [in B].

    MTG. Uh-huh. In his HSCA testimony, Jack White suggested that

    the forger's knife slipped and caused the post bulge. Could

    something like that have caused the bulge in the neck?

    MR. MEE. Possibly. Something's definitely off there.

    MTG. Oh, I wanted to ask you about McCamy's explanation of the

    indentation in the post.

    MR. MEE. All right.

    MTG. Let me read it here. He was referring to a computer

    printout that was produced by digital image processing.

    Our inspection of this leads us to believe that

    the apparent indentation is simply a shadow,

    because if you look very carefully, you can see

    the post running through that area, and this is

    just a slight darkening. So that was merely a

    shadow.

    MR. MEE. No, I don't think that's consistent with the direction

    of the sun in the pictures. It's not consistent with the way the

    bulge looks.

    MTG. So, just to summarize, you're saying that the sun,

    according to the body shadow, isn't in a position where it

    could cause a shadow that would produce the indentation

    in the post?

    MR. MEE. That's how it looks to me.

    MTG. Just to let you know, to my knowledge the panel never

    identified which leaf or branch could have possibly caused such a

    shadow. They simply said the bulge COULD have been caused by the

    shadow from a leaf or a branch, but they didn't say which leaf or

    branch.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the fact that

    a patch of sunlight on the side of the house beside the post

    holding the stairway does not change shape in any of the backyard

    pictures, indicating that the camera making the photo did not

    move horizontally. This patch of light is to the left of the

    post and is roughly parallel with the figure's right elbow.]

    MTG. Now, on the non-movement of that one shadow underneath

    the stairway. If it doesn't change shape or position, even

    though the pictures were supposedly taken with a hand-held

    camera, what does that say? I'm asking this because, supposedly,

    she [Marina] took the first picture. Snap. Then, Oswald came,

    took the camera from her, advanced the film, handed it back to

    her, and then went back to where he was. She then had to and

    position the camera again. And then this process was REPEATED

    for the third picture. So how could that patch of light not

    change in some way?

    MR. MEE. The possibility that that patch of light would stay

    in the same position and maintain the same shape after all that

    movement is remote. You'd need a tripod, and even then you'd

    have to be careful. Can we see that again?

    [Video segment is replayed several times.]

    MR. MEE. I think I can see what he's talking about, but can we

    look at that a couple more times?

    [Video segment is replayed two more times.]

    MR. MEE. Okay, let me take another look at these pictures really

    quickly.

    MTG. Oh, sure. Take your time.

    [Mr. Mee studies pictures for approximately one minute.]

    MTG. Do you see what he's talking about?

    MR. MEE. Yes. I would agree with that.

    MTG. So wouldn't that be almost impossible using a hand-held

    camera, especially given the way that these pictures were

    supposedly taken?

    MR. MEE. I would say it would be nearly impossible. The chances

    of something like that happening would be astronomically small.

    MTG. All right. . . .

    MR. MEE. Even if you were using a modern camera, one that would

    automatically advance the film after each shot, and were taking

    a series of pictures, your chances of achieving that effect

    would be low. They'd be better, but still very low.

    MTG. All right. Now, if I'm not mistaken, I think we have just

    one more segment.

    [MTG starts to play the video tape and then realizes there are no

    more video segments.]

    MTG. Nope. That was it. That was the last of the segments.

    MR. MEE. All right.

    MTG. Okay. Now, a little while back, I got a message on

    CompuServe from a gentleman named Paul Burke. In reference to

    Jack White's secondary method for producing the frame edge

    markings on the photos, he said, "Copying a photo assembled from

    a group of photos as you and others have postulated using the

    Imperial Reflex camera has a problem. Its focus ability, if any,

    is limited, so the master montage would have to be large, a

    couple of feet or so," which you said last time you didn't argue

    with. . . .

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Okay, and then he continues, "and it would have all sorts

    of granular discontinuities between the segments making it up,

    such as sharp lines for the cuts, etc., etc."

    MR. MEE. Well, I'd have to know more about the scenario he

    has in mind. What are we talking about here? I mean, how

    were the first pictures taken? What was in them? How many

    copies are we talking about?

    The appearance of your final product will depend on several

    factors. It's going to depend on things like the quality of your

    original photos, the camera, the enlarging equipment and

    materials, and the retouching. There are a lot of things

    that would come into play.

    As far as size goes, it probably would be a rather large

    photograph in this scenario. Your composite--it would have to be

    a rather big picture. With the lighting in these pictures [the

    backyard photos], I would guess that they used medium-speed film.

    But there are so many things you'd have to establish first before

    you made a judgment. And, also, the farther down the line you go

    from your original, the more quality you're going to lose.

    MTG. Okay. . . .

    MR. MEE. Another thing--these pictures ARE grainy. I'm talking

    about A, B, and C. They are not that sharp. They do have a

    lot of texture and grain to them. Plus, you've got that

    tell-tale line running across the chin, and the other things

    [i.e., the bulge in the neck in 133-A and the indentation in the

    post in 133-B].

    MTG. All right. This thing about the chin, the lines across the

    chin in 133-A. Now, in the extract, we read that McCamy was

    POSITIVE that the line that runs from one side of the neck to the

    other, crossing the chin--that that line was caused by a water

    spot. The panel as a whole, however, did not go this far. In

    the report it says that the cause of the lines has not been

    definitely determined. But I wanted to ask you what you thought

    of McCamy's explanation?

    MR. MEE. Well, I was reading through that, and I had some

    problems with it. The. . . .

    [side one of second tape runs out. Tape is flipped over, and

    the interview resumes.]

    MTG. Okay. So you said you had some problems with McCamy's

    explanation, with his claim that the irregular line across

    the chin was caused by a water spot. This is the line that

    Jack White mentions as well.

    MR. MEE. Well, there are a couple things. One thing is the

    sheer coincidence that this line just happens to fall in the chin

    area; that this one edge of this one particular water spot is

    supposed to have left deposits in such a way as to form a line

    that coincidentally starts at one side of the neck, crosses the

    chin, and then ends at the other side--right where Oswald's head

    could have been attached to the body. I mean, this would be a

    good place to join a head to a body in a composite, in the chin

    area, and here we have a line in that region, and it's supposed

    to be a water spot.

    The other problem I have with what he says has to do with

    his statements about the line as a photographic image.

    MTG. Now, this is just before he starts talking about water

    spots. You're talking about where he says the line isn't a

    photographic image.

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Again, that line is the one that Jack White discusses in

    the video, the one that starts off on one side of the upper neck,

    crosses the chin, and then goes to the other side of the neck.

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Just to give us some context here, why don't I go

    ahead and read exactly what he said about the line.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. Let's see. . . . Here it is. This was McCamy.

    Now that fine line is actually too fine to be a

    photographic image. The photographic image is

    made

    up of silver grains, and these grains are

    distributed all through here, so we have a good

    idea of their size and distribution. This line is

    a line that is much finer than the silver grains

    themselves. It is much too continuous to be a

    photographic line. A line that had been

    photographed from some kind of montage would have

    had the grain pattern of a discontinuous line, but

    this line is quite continuous. Indeed, we can

    follow this line down up to here and then back

    around to here. It is a closed loop.

    MR. MEE. Now, when you talk about what has been photographed--

    what you see in the picture--that has no bearing on the grains in

    the negative emulsion. The grains are more a characteristic of

    the film itself than what has been produced from a photographic

    print. So, when he ways, "This line is a line that is much finer

    than the silver grains themselves. This is much too continuous

    to be a photographic line"--this, to me, holds no water at all.

    He's looking at the A print, not at the negative, so his argument

    holds no water.

    [Mr. Mee again reads from the extract] "A line that had been

    photographed from some kind of montage would have had the

    grain pattern of a discontinuous line." Now, again, that's

    coming from a print, but what you'd need to look at would be the

    negative, and he didn't examine the A negative. So his

    argument is not valid. It doesn't prove anything. You see,

    the grain is a characteristic of the negative, not the print.

    I mean, even forgetting about that part of his argument, what

    he's saying is that it [the line] doesn't have a grain pattern

    running through it. The line is so fine that he says it's

    getting in between the grain, which would put it in the emulsion.

    It's like a sandwich, kind of like with two pieces of plastic,

    and then the water spot would be sitting on top. But I think

    that would be so obvious that there would be no doubt about it.

    When he says the line on the chin is part of a closed loop, I'm

    sort of at a disadvantage because I don't have the exhibit he was

    using. So it's hard for me to comment. But if that irregular

    line is part of a closed loop and was caused by a water spot,

    then the loop is the outline of the water spot. Now that line is

    almost straight, and water spots don't normally have edges like

    that. I mean, water spots . . . well . . . they're just that--

    they're spots. They're usually more oblique. They're not going

    to have long straight edges.

    And I'd like to see where the other edges of this loop are. I

    mean, they don't seem to be in the face. Just looking at these

    pictures here, I can see the line across the chin, but I don't

    see any other tell-tale lines in the face. So I'd like to know

    where the other edges [of the loop] are.

    MTG. Okay. What I'd like to do now is ask you about McCamy's

    point concerning what they saw when they examined the negative,

    the 133-B negative, with a phase contrast microscope. Let me

    just read that part, okay?

    MR. MEE. Sure.

    MTG. [Reading from the extract]

    We examined the negative with a phase contrast

    microscope, which would detect very, very small

    changes in thickness in the negative.

    He didn't come right out and say it, but I assume he was saying

    that they checked the negative with that high-powered microscope

    and didn't find any changes in thickness in the chin area in the

    negative.

    MR. MEE. Well, the thickness of the negative is not necessarily

    going to be relevant. What I'm saying is that the original

    photograph could have been copied and then a negative could have

    been made from that. So you're not going to see any difference

    in density in the negative if the negative came from a retouched

    photo.

    MTG. Uh-huh. Oh, let's go back to the water spot for just a

    second if we could. I wanted to ask you something else about

    what McCamy said about it.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. He said, "We did not see water spots. . . ." Now, in the

    extract the word "not" is missing, but it's obvious that that's

    what he was saying. As you read on, it's obvious that that's

    what he was saying. [Resumes reading]

    We did not see water spots on 133-B, but we do see

    that this same spot occurs on both of these first-

    generation prints of the A negative, so we know

    that the spot must have been on the negative.

    Any comments on that?

    MR. MEE. Well, to me, what he's saying is inconsistent. He's

    saying that the water spot had to be on the A negative because

    it's on the print, and that it's not part of the photographic

    image. But unless you see the negative, you can't really say

    that.

    MTG. Now, just for the record here, let me read what the

    [photographic] panel said about the irregular lines that

    appeared on the scanned image of the B negative. I'm reading

    from Groden and Livingstone's book HIGH TREASON.

    MR. MEE. Yes.

    MTG. Let me go ahead and read that out of the book.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. They're quoting directly from the photographic panel's

    report. Let's see. . . . Here it is. [Reads from page

    201 of HIGH TREASON]

    Under very carefully adjusted display conditions,

    the scanned image of the Oswald backyard negative

    did exhibit irregular, very fine lines in the chin

    area.

    The panel went on to say that the lines were probably caused

    by "very faint water stains." Comments?

    MR. MEE. Yes, I meant to ask you about their reference to

    "lines," not just a single line. What other lines did they find?

    MTG. You know, to be honest, I don't know. I've wondered about

    that myself, because McCamy only mentioned one line that was

    found with digital image scanning.

    MR. MEE. Huh. Well, as far as what we just read, I would

    say it's evidence of tampering. I don't accept the idea that

    that line across the chin was caused by a water spot, at least

    not at this stage I don't. Now, again, I haven't seen the

    exhibit that shows the shape of the water spot that McCamy says

    caused the line, but I'd be surprised if it caused me to change

    my mind. I just don't think a water spot would leave that kind

    of a line.

    MTG. Okay. . . .

    [side two of second tape runs out. That tape is removed from the

    tape recorder and is replaced with the third tape.]

    MTG. Okay. Now, McCamy said that they examined the chin area

    with digital image processing and that they didn't find any

    granular inconsistencies.

    MR. MEE. Well, if you matched the film speed, using the kind of

    film that was common back then, it would be hard to prove

    something either way. Back then there was pretty much one way of

    making film.

    If you had a forger who knew his stuff and who knew the kinds

    of things that would be checked for later on, you'd have to

    guess that he would have done his best to match the grain

    characteristics. This wouldn't have been impossible. If

    he had access to the negatives of the pictures of Oswald's

    head, it could have been done.

    What I'm saying is that the tampering, the pasting of the head

    onto the figure's chin, could have been done well enough to where

    they [the members of the photographic panel] would not have been

    able to pick it up with the technology that they had at that

    time.

    MTG. Ah, here's the part I was looking for you. If I could,

    I'd like to read this to you. This is about the grain pattern

    again.

    One of the things that we wanted to do was to

    study the nature of the silver grain in the areas

    above the chin and below the chin, because of the

    allegation that there were two different

    photographs in some way. And so we did

    that. . . . And as photographic scientists, we

    found nothing remarkable about the grain pattern.

    This was the same type of grain pattern.

    MR. MEE. But, again, if the forger matched up the film, there

    wouldn't be any noticeable difference in the grain. It [digital

    image processing] would be inconclusive. Now, I'm not saying

    this would not be an easy process. It would all depend on if

    you had the negatives of the pictures of the head.

    MTG. To match the film, you mean.

    MR. MEE. Right. But it could be done. With the way film was

    made back then--there was pretty much one way of making film--if

    you matched the film speed, assuming you had access to the

    negative of each head shot you were using, you could match the

    film characteristics.

    MTG. So your position is that the things that they claimed to

    have observed through digital image processing in and of

    themselves cannot prove that these are authentic photographs?

    MR. MEE. No, I don't think that digital image processing alone

    can prove these photographs are authentic. With the technology

    that was available back then [in the late 1970s], I don't think

    they could have proven this. I don't know that it could be done

    today--possibly, with the scanning technology that's just

    coming out, you could do it. It would depend on how carefully

    the forger matched the film and on what steps he went through to

    fake the photographs.. There are a lot of variables.

    MTG. All right. Vanishing point analysis. I'm a layman, and

    when I read this, I got the impression that they didn't want to

    deal with the shadow angles themselves, so they resorted to

    this vanishing point analysis. They tried to explain all the

    shadow problems in the pictures--the neck, the nose and the eyes,

    the body shadows--with vanishing point analysis. Let me read

    this so we have some context here:

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Mr. McCamy, how did the panel

    address the question of the shadows in the

    backyard pictures?

    Mr. MCCAMY. This was addressed by a vanishing

    point analysis.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. What do you mean by "vanishing

    point analysis"?

    Mr. MCCAMY. The sun is very distant, so far away

    that we can consider it to be at infinity, and as

    a result, if we draw a line from an object to the

    shadow of the object, and we do this in a number

    of places in a scene, all of those lines are

    parallel lines.

    Now you may recall, if you have ever seen a

    photograph of railroad tracks disappearing into

    the distance, the photograph shows those two rails

    converging at a point. That is called the

    vanishing point. The rails are parallel but in

    the photograph they converge. This is taught in

    art courses in high school and in mechanical

    drawing, so the converging of parallel lines is a

    well-known matter of perspective. In a photograph

    one should expect that these parallel shadow lines

    should converge at the vanishing point. . . .

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes. Here we have 133-A and 133-B. A

    line is drawn from a part of this stairway, past

    the shadow of the stairway, down to here. A line

    is drawn from the butt of the pistol, through the

    shadow of the butt of the pistol, down to here,

    from the arm to the shadow of the arm, down to

    here. And when we do this for all the points in

    the photograph, we find that they all meet at a

    point, as they should.

    Now this is the line that passes through the nose

    and the chin down to here, and that one is the

    nose to the shadow of the nose. That is the one

    thing that has been disputed so frequently, and

    if you do the analysis properly, you see that the

    shadow lies right where it is supposed to lie.

    The same thing is true over here. Here we have the

    muzzle of the rifle, the shadow of the muzzle of

    the rifle, and so on down the line.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Mr. McCamy, if the lines were not

    parallel, would they all meet at one point as they

    do in these two exhibits?

    Mr. MCCAMY. No.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. If the lines in these two exhibits

    had not met at one point, what conclusion or

    inference might you have drawn?

    Mr. MCCAMY. We might have drawn the conclusion

    that something had been drawn in rather than

    traced in by the hand of nature.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Did you do a similar vanishing

    point analysis for 133-C?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes..

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. And what were the results?

    Mr. MCCAMY. The results were the same.

    Now, when you read on, however, it gets a little more

    interesting. McCamy was asked about the sharp angles of the

    lines in his analysis. I'll find it here. It jumped out at me

    as soon as I read it. [MTG looks through extract for a few

    seconds] Okay. Here it is. Let me read this. He [McCamy]

    was being questioned by Congressman Fithian, who was the only

    guy to ask any challenging questions. He [Fithian] said,

    This morning I was listening carefully when you

    described the vanishing point concept, which I

    find fascinating. But I wonder why did the

    vanishing point lines converge in such a very,

    very short distance on your chart.

    Now, I look at a railroad, even an artist's

    conception of a railroad track, or a road where it

    sort of narrows off. It gives me the impression

    that we are talking about, you know, great

    distances.

    Yet, there are some very, very sharp angles that

    those lines from the bush and the nose and the

    rest of it come in, all within 2 feet on your

    chart. Could you explain that optical problem

    that I am having?

    And here's McCamy's answer:

    Yes. The vanishing point may be at infinity; that

    is, if we have parallel vertical lines and the

    axis of the camera is horizontal. Then we do get

    parallel lines, and of course that says that the

    vanishing point is at infinity.

    Now, a very slight tilt of the camera will cause a

    convergence, but it would be a very slight

    convergence. It starts at infinity and it begins

    to move inward.

    Now, on the photographs that we saw here, the

    vanishing point of the shadows was substantially

    below the photographs. If photographs had been

    made later and later in that day, I have estimated

    that these pictures were taken about 4 to 4:30 in

    the afternoon--if pictures were made later, the

    vanishing point would have continued to move up

    until finally it would be within the picture area;

    that is, as the Sun had moved behind the

    photographer.

    In the instance that you cite of the railroad

    track disappearing into the distance, the

    vanishing point is in the picture, and you

    are seeing the vanishing point.

    I think that is as far as I can go in describing

    that phenomenon.. The vanishing point can be

    anywhere from at infinity to right in the picture

    itself.

    Now, I didn't quite understand exactly how McCamy explained the

    fact that the angles in his chart were so sharp and converged

    in such a short distance.

    MR. MEE. Well, not having looked at his chart, it's hard for

    me to comment on it. I'd have to look at it and see exactly what

    we're talking about. Those lines and sharp angles do sound odd,

    but I'd need to see the chart itself before I could really form

    an opinion here.

    But, really, I understand the principle of vanishing points,

    and I don't think it's relevant in this case. The real issue is

    the conflicts between the shadows. And, another thing, I can

    tell you that the sun that hit Oswald's face wasn't in a four

    o'clock position. You've also get to deal with the absence of

    shadow where there should be shadow. You've got to look at the

    shadows themselves--study their angles, determine the direction

    of your light source, those kinds of things.

    I mean, a vanishing point analysis is not about to explain

    why Oswald's nose shadow doesn't move or change form in the

    photographs. It's not going to explain why you seem to have

    two separate light sources hitting the body and the face. It's

    not going to explain those bulges [in the neck and the post].

    MTG. Okay. The disappearing chin. McCamy said that the

    edge of the chin disappeared in shadow. Now, the problem he

    was trying to explain is the fact that in the backyard photos

    the chin is broad and flat, but in all other pictures of Oswald--

    in all those that were taken from any kind of a frontal

    viewpoint--his chin is sharp and cleft.

    MR. MEE. It HAS disappeared in shadow, but not to the extent

    that Oswald's would have, and that's the difference.

    MTG. Okay. He [McCamy] was saying that Oswald's chin form

    vanished to the point that in the picture it looks like he has a

    broad, flat chin.

    MR. MEE. No, I would disagree with that. The sun was not in

    a position to have that much of an effect on the appearance of

    the chin.

    MTG. Uh-huh. Okay. Now, Mr. Fithian, bless his heart, he had

    a problem with this, too. Here's part of the exchange he had

    with McCamy:

    Mr. FITHIAN. Here is a thing that I had the

    greatest difficulty with in terms of my own

    viewing of the photographs, is the squareness of

    the chin.

    I wonder, Mr. Chairman, if we could ask that that

    multiple photograph, that chart with half a dozen

    Oswalds on it, plus the two, could be put back up.

    While we are doing this, let me preface my

    question by saying that sitting here and looking

    at your exhibit, I did not visually at least

    identify any other chin that was even

    approximately as square as the one in the backyard

    photograph--from all of the pictures that you put

    up.

    I could not see that. I hate to return to what you

    have already done. But it still puzzles me and

    troubles me. That seems to be one of the

    strongest points of the critics, is the misshape

    of the chin. I want to make sure I understood

    your testimony.

    It was your testimony that it was the light and

    shadow combination of an overhead Sun or whatever?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes.

    Mr. FITHIAN. Do I understand you correctly?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes.

    Then they went on for a bit, and then Fithian continued:

    Mr. FITHIAN. In the photo, in the two large

    blowups, the right-hand photo, is it your

    testimony, then, that the point of the chin, which

    obviously doesn't disappear--and I find it

    difficult to believe that just by changing your

    teeth or your mouth position it really makes that

    much difference--is it then that the point of the

    chin disappears in the shadow of the chin in

    layman's terms?

    Is that what you are saying happens in that

    photograph?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes, the lower part of the chin is not

    illuminated, so you don't see it. It just

    disappears in the shadow.

    MTG. Do you accept that?

    MR. MEE. Well, such a thing is possible, but not in this

    instance, because of the position of the sun.

    MTG. And that is what?

    MR. MEE. The position of the sun?

    MTG. Yeah.

    MR. MEE. Well, the sun is overhead and to his left.

    MTG. Based on the body shadows, you mean?

    MR. MEE. Yeah. The sunlight is coming down at him from about

    a four o'clock position. So I don't see how it could have made

    that much of his chin disappear. I mean, the underside of the

    chin is in shadow, but the edge hasn't vanished. The form [of

    the chin] is still there.

    MTG. What if the sun came from right around a twelve o'clock

    position?

    MR. MEE. Well, then you'd have to explain why both sides of the

    neck aren't in the same amount of shadow, and why the body shadow

    falls off to his right.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. I mean, if anything, it seems like there's more chin

    there, more than there should be, in terms of width, even if

    you ignore how flat it is.

    MTG. Yeah, I think so too.

    MR. MEE. That's how it looks to me. I would say the chin is a

    serious problem.

    MTG. Uh-huh. Okay. Now, I'd like to ask you about the

    fact that the panel found only very small variations in the

    distances between objects in the background of the pictures.

    Given the way that these photos were supposedly taken, does

    that seem possible?

    MR. MEE. No, the variations would be greater if these

    photographs were taken the way Marina said they were. I mean,

    like they showed in the video: She snaps a picture; Oswald walks

    over and takes the camera from her; he advances the film; he

    hands the camera back to her; he goes back over and assumes

    another pose; she aims with the camera again and then takes the

    picture; and they go through this process again for the third

    photo. No. . . . No way. The camera would have moved more than

    just a tiny fraction of an inch.

    Even with a professional photographer who's trying to hold the

    camera as still as possible, you're going to have more variations

    in distance than what they're talking about in these pictures.

    MTG. Now, Jack White mentioned that the small differences in

    distance could have been produced by keystoning. What do you

    think about that?

    MR. MEE. Oh, I think he's right. Now, when he was demonstrating

    the keystoning effect in the video, he was exaggerating a little

    bit to help you understand what he was talking about, but he's

    got the right idea. It would be a simple matter of tilting the

    easel just a little bit. I mean, any slight movement in the

    enlarger or the easel could cause the kinds of differences

    they're talking about here.

    MTG. Okay. Stereoscopic analysis. They said that when they

    analyzed these photos, they were able to view them

    stereoscopically. Let me just read some of what McCamy said:

    We were able to view these photographs

    stereoscopically, so we know that there was slight

    camera movement. We know that there were two

    pictures. But it has much more far reaching

    consequence than that.

    It tells us that there was a solid three

    dimensional field that was photographed two times.

    If one were to have photographed the background

    once, and then taken a camera and photographed

    that print and then rephotographed the print from

    two angles, when that is viewed stereoscopically,

    the human eye would tell you that you were looking

    at a plane print. That isn't what we saw. We saw

    depth, and we can still see depth.

    Now if one were going to do art work on actual

    stereo pairs, that art work has to be done

    exceedingly meticulously, because the slightest

    difference in the art work on one photograph and

    the art work on the other photograph would cause

    the points involved to appear to be too far away

    or too close. They would tend to float in space.

    So stereo viewing is an excellent way of checking

    up on the authenticity of the photograph.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Is any special viewer necessary to

    enable someone to see in stereo?

    Mr. MCCAMY. It is not necessary but it makes it

    more convenient for most people.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. How many panel members examined

    these photographs in stereo?

    Mr. MCCAMY. At least, oh, a half dozen.

    MTG. Any thoughts about that?

    MR. MEE. If you have slight movement during the enlarging

    process or during the copying process, I think you could get a

    different perspective in the photographs that would cause that

    effect. So, that doesn't prove. . . . It doesn't convincingly

    say that these pictures are authentic.

    I mean, I think we've all at one time looked through those little

    children's viewfinders and have seen those cartoon slides in

    3-D. The reason you get that is that you're looking through two

    different eyes and seeing the result of a slight movement of the

    prints. The prints of the cartoons have been slightly moved--the

    prints you're looking at through the viewfinder. You've got two

    prints, and they've been moved slightly, and that's what gives

    you your 3-D effect, the slight movement of those prints.

    So, in the case of these photographs. . . .

    MTG. The backyard photographs.

    MR. MEE. Right. In this case, if you had slight movement in

    the enlarger or during the copying process, you could get the

    right amount of difference between the photos so that you would

    be able to view them in stereo.

    MTG. Okay. One thing that I'd really like to ask you about

    has to do with the DeMohrenschildt photograph and the frame edge

    markings. Actually, it doesn't just involve the frame edge

    markings. It involves matching the DeMohrenschildt photo to the

    IR camera's film plane aperture. We talked about this briefly

    last time. Now, when Jack White testified before the Committee,

    the House Select Committee. . . .

    MR. MEE. Uh-huh.

    MTG. When he testified before the Committee, he said that. . . .

    [side one of the third tape runs out. Tape is flipped over, and

    the interview resumes.]

    MTG. Okay. Now, this involves the finding of the edge markings

    on the edges of the DeMohrenschildt photo and the determination

    that the photo is genuine because those markings are unique to

    the IR camera. Now, Jack White, when he testified back then,

    said. . . . Well, let me read what he said. [Reads from page

    205 of HIGH TREASON]

    The DeMohrenschildt picture shows a much larger

    amount of background around the edges than any of

    the photographs, 133-A, B, or C. To me, this

    indicates that the DeMohrenschildt picture is

    printed full negative. In fact, we can verify

    this because it is printed with a black border

    around the edge, the black border being the clear

    area around the edge of the negative.

    According to the FBI, the picture, CE-133-B, was

    identified as being taken with Oswald's camera

    because it could be matched to the film plane

    aperture. Yet, if the DeMohrenschildt picture

    shows a larger background area and it is taken

    from the same camera viewpoint, then 133-A, B, and

    C have been cropped and, therefore, if there is

    more background area in the picture, then it [the

    DeMohrenschildt photo] could not possibly be

    matched to the film plane aperture.

    Do you understand his point?

    MR. MEE. Yes.

    MTG. Can you explain it in layman's terms? Do you think he's

    right?

    MR. MEE. Well, there are certain things I'd have to know

    before I could say whether or not he's right. I'll put it this

    way: If the DeMohrenschildt photo has a lot more background than

    the B negative, and if both were taken from the same camera

    viewpoint, then, yes, that would tend to tell me that Mr. White

    is correct. What you'd have to do is make precise measurements

    of the DeMohrenschildt picture and the B negative, and then

    compare them. You'd also need to know if they were taken from

    the same camera viewpoint. You'd want a good, uncropped print of

    the B negative. These are the kinds of things I'd need to check

    out before I could really say anything about what he [White]

    says here.

    MTG. In his video, Jack White suggests that the DeMohrenschildt

    photo is a composite made up of 133-A and the border of the film

    plane aperture of the IR camera.

    MR. MEE. Can we see that segment again?

    MTG. Yeah.

    [Video segment is located on the tape and then replayed.]

    MR. MEE. No, that explanation. . . . I see what he's saying,

    but if you do that, you're going to have sort of a line of

    demarcation all the way around. This would be very easy to

    identify. Or, let's put it this way: It would be very difficult

    to cover up, extremely difficult to cover up, a line like that.

    It would be almost impossible to do that.

    MTG. Okay. Now to get back to the other point, about the fact

    that it's so much clearer than 133-A and. . . .

    MR.. MEE. It's an earlier generation than the ones that have

    been cropped..

    MTG. Right. Now how would they have gotten the two scratch

    marks onto it [the DeMohrenschildt photo]?

    MR. MEE. Well, this gets into how these pictures could have

    been made. I'll tell you what I think they might have done.

    [Mr. Mee starts to draw a diagram, using squares to represent

    pictures and/or negatives. As he presents his explanation, he

    points back and forth to the different squares. For instance,

    when he refers to "this one" or says "here," he points to a

    certain square, and then when he says something like "and then

    this one over here," he points to a different square, etc.,

    etc.]

    You see, what I'm thinking is that there was a group of backyard

    photographs made long before the DeMohrenschildt photograph, and

    that at some point in this earlier group you have composites.

    The first pictures, the very first ones, would be taken with a

    high-quality camera, a very high-quality camera. So your first

    pictures are all very high quality. Okay?

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. And then this group here would be taken from those

    pictures, again using a high-quality camera. Now the pictures

    in this group would be smaller than the first ones.

    And then, after that, just for example, way down the road,

    133-A, B, and C were taken from these. Okay? And every time

    along the way you're losing a generation.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. And, you never can tell, there may have been more then

    a couple generations in between these photos.

    Now, in the early stages, we're just talking about the

    background--one very high-quality picture of the backyard.

    So, then, you get down to here where you have your first pictures

    that include the figure holding the rifle and the newspapers.

    Okay?

    MTG. All right.

    MR. MEE. Now, there may have been more originals. You don't

    know how many could have existed before that.

    At this stage here, you introduce one or two heads, and you

    retouch those prints. Then, you photograph that print and

    you come up with a print and a negative here. And you do that

    for each picture. Now, these prints could be retouched, or the

    negatives could be retouched. Then, you'd make prints from those

    negatives.

    Now, you're down to here. This is where we introduce this stage,

    here. These photographs can either be the same or a generation

    or two down. Okay, then you've got these photos here--they've

    had the art work done on them and they've been reworked. Until

    now you're using a very high-quality camera. Then, you

    photograph one of these photos with the IR camera to make, for

    example, the DeMohrenschildt picture, which would give you the

    edge markings and the scratches.

    MTG. Now, what would happen if you were to analyze, say, the

    negative of this photo right here with digital image processing

    after all this stuff had been done?

    MR. MEE. Well, you've got to remember that you have these other

    pictures up here, where the heads are included. The grain

    pattern of this photo--the one that you're talking about--is

    going to be dependent on the film that has been used. If you

    have the negative of the photo of the head, then you know what

    kind of film to use.

    Let's say you saw that the film used for the head was, oh, 100-

    speed Kodak. That was a pretty common film back then, 100-speed.

    It might have even been less than that. Now, you would have to

    be sure, then, to use 100-speed Kodak to shoot the prints of the

    background and of the guy standing with the rifle and the

    newspapers. The key would be to keep your film consistent

    throughout. That would be very important. Now, if you did this,

    it would be extremely difficult, with the technology that they

    had during that time, to detect what little differences you

    would have with this process. We're talking about the late

    seventies?

    MTG. 1978 to 1979.

    MR. MEE. Right. I don't think they had the technology back then

    to be able to discern the small differences you'd have if you

    kept your film consistent. Today, possibly, with the

    sophistication of the computers and the scanning capabilities

    that they're just now coming out with, you might be able to spot

    the differences. But in the late seventies, I don't think they

    had the capability to detect them. As long as you maintained

    the consistency of the film for your photos, they'd all blend

    together. It's just like anything else. If your process is

    gradual enough, they're going to blend right in. This is how I

    think these photographs could have been made.

    MTG. Do you think there was only one forger?

    MR. MEE. No, I think you would have needed a team, a group of

    professionals.

    MTG. I'd like to show you a couple doctored prints that were

    released by Dallas authorities in 1992.

    [MTG shows Mr. Mee the two prints, both of which show a white

    human silhouette where Oswald is supposed to be. The whited-out

    figure corresponds closely in size and outline to the figure in

    the backyard photos.]

    MR. MEE. Is that right? Well, somebody was doing something.

    Now, this doesn't prove that this is how it was done. But these

    prints might represent an early attempt to produce the backyard

    photos. You never know.

    See, the thing is, though, I don't believe the pictures were

    made like this because you would have had too much area to

    retouch, even for a good retoucher. Here, in the head area, you

    would have only had a very small area to worry about. Mind you,

    these prints might have been a part of the process. It could

    have been done that way. But that's not how I would have done

    it.

    They [the forgers] probably looked at several different options

    for making these photographs, and they would have been looking

    for the best method. So these prints could have been one

    of the ways that they considered.

    MTG. All right. I'd like to ask you about varying exposure

    analysis.

    MR. MEE. Well, I understand what they were doing. The theory

    is that you're trying to. . . .

    MTG. Can I go ahead and read a little bit first?

    MR. MEE. Sure.

    MTG. Okay, I'm going to read some of what McCamy said about

    this.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Please explain the results of this

    varying exposure analysis.

    Mr. MCCAMY.. Yes. In these illustrations, the

    greatest exposure gives the darkest print, and the

    least exposure, the lightest print. The advantage

    of doing this is that in the lightest areas of the

    picture we can see detail here that cannot be seen

    up here. Conversely, in the shadows, this is the

    best photograph on which to look for the detail.

    So that is a print ideally exposed to look into

    the shadows. This one is ideally exposed to look

    into the highlights, so we can see all the detail

    there.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. After applying this method, did

    the panel discern anything unusual about these

    pictures?

    Mr. MCCAMY. No, nothing at all. There had been

    allegations that the shadows were painted in, and

    a simple examination of the shadows on these

    pictures shows that there is plenty of detail

    there. You can see grass, little stones. There

    is a newspaper lying back here. You can see the

    detail on it.

    Any comments?

    MR. MEE. I don't think it's an issue. I mean, I don't think the

    shadows were added. Now, I haven't had time to study these

    pictures long enough to give a firm opinion in this area. But,

    just from what I can see--again, without looking at the

    originals--I don't think the shadows were added.

    What he's talking about here is altering the exposure so

    you can see detail in the shadows. A black and white print has

    different grades from lightness to darkness. The full spectrum

    is called a zone system. The full spectrum is from 1 to 10--1

    being your whitest white, and 10 being your blackest black. Most

    cameras and film can only pick up a zone from about. . . . Well,

    let's say this is a sliding scale. Your camera might get a very

    white white, but it might not get a really dark dark, and it

    doesn't get everything in between. So, by altering the exposure,

    you can lighten these dark areas and see detail in them.

    Now that doesn't explain the problems of the different shadow

    angles and the bulges in the post and the neck.

    MTG. Right.

    MR. MEE. And I still have some questions about the shadow

    of the neck and the head in 133-A. It looks a little odd, but

    that might be due to using a different head. But the shadows of

    the bushes, the stairway, and all that--I don't see why a

    retoucher would have bothered with them. It would have been

    taking an unnecessary risk. So, really, I'd tend to agree with

    him [McCamy]. From what I can see, I don't think the shadows

    were added.

    MTG. Okay. . . .

    MR. MEE. Now, if he's saying that this analysis explains the

    shadow angles and those neck and post bulges, then I would

    disagree with him. You're not going to explain away those

    problems with that sort of analysis.

    MTG. It seems to me that the easiest way to explain the

    different body shadows would be to assume that they were

    photographed at different times of the day.

    MR. MEE. Yeah, I think they were just taken at different times

    of the day.

    You see, I understand what some of these guys [conspiracists] are

    saying. If you had a situation where you took a picture of the

    scene, and then took a picture of a person in a studio or

    somewhere else and then put the figure in the picture, then you'd

    need to add the shadows. But I agree with him [McCamy] here. I

    don't think the shadows were added. It would be a lot easier to

    just put a head on a body. I mean, you could put anybody in the

    picture. You could take the picture with the background and

    the body and everything, and then just take the head and put it

    on the figure. That would be a lot easier.

    MTG. Okay. I know we talked about this quite a bit last time,

    but I'd like to ask you again about the reenactment that McCamy

    cited to show that the nose shadow could remain the same even

    with the head tilted. I've already discussed this reenactment

    in detail in the forum [the JFK Assassination Forum on

    CompuServe]. I'd just like to get some of your views on it.

    MR. MEE. [begins shaking his head from side to side in the

    typical "No" motion.] Right. Well. . . . [pauses and

    continues to shake his head]

    MTG. Well, you know, even Congressman Fithian pointed out that

    the chances that all those things would occur at the same

    time were very low. [Fithian was referring to the manipulated

    and unrealistic head and camera movements that were done in the

    reenactment.]

    MR. MEE. Yeah. Well, let's put it this way: What they did

    wasn't realistic. The bottom line is that the [nose] shadow

    should have shifted when the head tilted. I mean, with the head

    tilted like that, you wouldn't have a drastic change, but you'd

    get enough movement that you could easily spot the difference.

    There's just no way that shadow should look like that.

    MTG. Okay. Let's see. . . . Let me see if I can find it

    here. Okay, here it is. What I have here is a picture. . . .

    [side two of the third tape runs out. The portion follows is

    reconstructed from notes taken by MTG. MTG showed Mr. Mee the

    notes at the conclusion of the interview, and Mr. Mee said

    they accurately reflected what he had said.]

    MTG. I'd like to show you a picture from Gerald Posner's book

    CASE CLOSED. The picture shows the grain structure analysis that

    was done on the right side of Oswald's face. Would you take a

    look at it and tell me what you think?

    [MTG shows Mr. Mee the bottom photo on the sixth page of pictures

    in Posner's book. Mr. Mee studies it for about a minute.]

    MR. MEE. I can see some variation in the grain pattern.

    However, I wouldn't form an opinion just from looking at a copy

    of a picture of this nature in a book. I would need to study the

    originals with a high-powered microscope so that I could see the

    grain structure. But, if the forger matched the film, and given

    the fact that for the most part there was one standard way

    of making film in the 60s, I wouldn't expect to see a big

    difference in the grain anyway. If the film was in fact

    matched, it would be difficult to reach a definite conclusion

    about the grain in terms of the authenticity of the backyard

    photos.

    MTG. When McCamy recognized that Mr. Scott's photograph was

    a fake, he did so because the shadows on the suit didn't match

    the shadows on the railing. McCamy explained:

    He [Mr. Scott, a fellow panel member] spent 40

    hours with an assistant preparing a fake

    photograph of a man standing in a backyard. When

    he presented the photograph, he mailed it to me, I

    pulled it out of the envelope, and as I pulled it

    out of the envelope I said it is a fake.

    I was rather surprised that it was that easy. As

    it turned out, what he had done was to make a

    photograph, a 6-foot photograph of a 6-foot man,

    and this was placed in the backyard, and it was

    photographed.

    But there was a thing that caught my eye

    instantly; that is, that there were shadows that

    were cast by parts of a dark suit. There were

    shadows cast by parts of a railing immediately

    behind the man.

    When the suit was in full sunlight, it exactly

    matched the railing. But the shadows on the suit

    didn't match the shadows on the railing.

    Now, that would not be the way it would have been

    if it had been a true photograph.

    When I read this, I thought it was strange that this was the same

    man who had just gone to such great lengths to dismiss the

    implications of the variant shadows in the backyard photos. Yet,

    he admitted that he concluded that Mr. Scott's picture was a fake

    because some of the shadows didn't match. What is your opinion

    on this matter?

    MR. MEE. McCamy was saying the same thing about Scott's photo

    that others have said about the backyard pictures. He was not

    consistent.

    Inconsistent shadows in a photo are a clear indication of fakery.

    McCamy was absolutely correct in immediately branding Mr. Scott's

    picture a fake based on the conflicting shadows, because we

    only have one sun. The shadow conflicts in the backyard

    photographs are at least, if not more, serious and telling. The

    head and the body were not photographed in the same sunlight.

    They were taken at two different times of the day.

    MTG. What do you think of the argument that a good forger would

    have done his pasting in a different part of the body, such as

    in the stomach or in the chest?

    MR. MEE. For one thing, in order to attach an upper body onto

    someone else's lower body in the stomach or chest area, you would

    have to match the shirt widths exactly. You would need to

    maintain consistency in any wrinkles or folds that came up to the

    joining point. You would have to ensure that the two persons'

    builds and figures were compatible. Also, the larger the object

    that your attaching, the harder it will be to hide the pasting.

    There is also the matter of the figure's pose. In order to

    attach Oswald's upper body onto a lower body, the forgers would

    have needed a picture of Oswald with his arms and hands in the

    necessary positions. They would have needed photos of him

    with his hands held in such a way that the rifle and the

    newspapers could have been inserted into them.

    Doing the pasting at the abdomen or lower would also present

    problems. The builds and figures would again have to be

    compatible. And you would be increasing the size of the

    object to be attached, thus making it even harder to hide

    the pasting.

    The chin area would be a logical place to do the joining, for

    a number of reasons. Most people have a natural cleft or

    indentation of some form in the chin, beneath the lower lip, and

    I notice that the line across Oswald's chin runs through this

    area. In joining only about 4/5 of a head onto a chin, the

    object to be attached would be small, much smaller than part or

    all of a man's upper body.

    The neck would be another place where the pasting could be done.

    The object to be attached would still be relatively small, at

    least when compared to an upper body. But, you would need to

    have necks that were identical in size and shape.

    MTG. Finally, what would you say in summary about the backyard

    photographs?

    MR. MEE. I am convinced they are fake. They show impossible

    shadows. The shadow conflicts are serious and telling. There is

    no way the backyard photos could have identical, or even nearly

    identical, backgrounds if they were taken in the manner described

    by Marina Oswald. The figure's chin is not Oswald's chin. This

    is readily apparent. Even if we were to accept the claim that

    the line across the chin was caused by a water spot, that would

    not change the fact that the chin itself is noticeably different

    from Oswald's chin. The neck bulge and the post indentation are

    further indications of tampering.

    MTG. I would like to thank you for coming here tonight and for

    taking so much of your time to answer my questions.

    MR. MEE. You're quite welcome, and it was my pleasure.

    TRANSCRIPT OF INTERVIEW WITH MR. BRIAN MEE

    CONCERNING THE FAMOUS BACKYARD RIFLE PHOTOGRAPHS

    ------------

    Introduction

    ------------

    On Tuesday, 16 August, 1994, I met with Mr. Brian Mee in my home

    for the better part of three hours to discuss the famous backyard

    rifle photos, which seem to show Oswald wearing a pistol belt

    and holding a rifle in one hand and some radical newspapers

    in the other hand. There are three backyard photographs

    currently in evidence. They are labeled CE 133-A, B, and C.

    Each shows the Oswald figure in a different pose. Although the

    Dallas police said they found two negatives, one for A and one

    for B, only the B negative is known to exist. An important

    backyard snapshot was discovered in the late 1970s when the House

    Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) was conducting its

    investigation. This photo, known as 133-A, DeMohrenschildt, is

    much clearer than 133-A and was printed full negative.

    Prior to our interview, I supplied Mr. Mee with a 22-page extract

    from the file PHOTOS.ZIP, which at the time was available on

    CompuServe's JFK Assassination Forum. This file contains the

    HSCA testimony of two members of the Committee's photographic

    panel, Calvin S. McCamy and Cecil W. Kirk, who testified in

    defense of the backyard pictures. I also supplied Mr. Mee with

    sections on the photos from two books that dispute their

    authenticity.

    I had discussed the photos with Mr. Mee on one previous occasion,

    which was during our meeting of 8 August. That meeting was not

    recorded.

    In my 8 August meeting with Mr. Mee, I showed him Jack White's

    video FAKE: THE FORGED PHOTO THAT FRAMED OSWALD. We did not

    stop the video. We watched it all the way through. Then, once

    it was over, I asked him about some of the points made therein.

    In our 16 August meeting, we viewed about a dozen selected

    segments from White's video. We did so one segment at a time.

    In several instances, we reviewed a certain portion four or five

    or more times, and then stopped to discuss it at length before

    continuing. Of course, we also discussed in considerable detail

    the 22-page extract of Kirk and McCamy's testimony.

    Our meeting ran about 2 hours and 55 minutes, give or take a

    minute or two. I recorded all but about 15 minutes of it on

    audio cassettes. I had obtained two 60-minute tapes and one 30-

    minute tape for the interview, never thinking that it would even

    go beyond two hours. A few of those not-recorded 15

    minutes were due to my not releasing the "Pause" button on my

    recorder after I had paused the tape while we viewed a video

    segment. (At times, however, I let the tape run while we

    viewed a video segment.) The remaining unrecorded minutes

    occurred toward the end of our meeting, when I ran out of

    cassette tape. When this happened, I took notes. At the end

    of the interview, Mr. Mee reviewed my notes from the unrecorded

    portion, and he stated that they accurately reflected what he

    had said.

    I should make it clear at the outset that we did not examine

    copies directly from the National Archives. Of course, we did

    not study the original photos and the 133-B negative either.

    Just about the first thing Mr. Mee asked me when he came through

    the door was if I had access to the originals, and if I had my

    own copies from the National Archives. Mr. Mee stated that in

    some cases he would be unable to provide a firm judgment due to

    the nature of the copies we had available to examine.

    I will say, though, that in his video White uses copies of good-

    quality reproductions of the backyard photos that he obtained

    from the National Archives. I used the freeze-frame function on

    my VCR and also made several long video segments of the photos

    from Jack White's video. We viewed these on my 19-inch color TV,

    which has a very high-quality picture. Additionally, I made

    available to Mr. Mee an enlarged copy of 133-A from a fairly good

    reproduction in Matthew Smith's book JFK: THE SECOND PLOT. Our

    other source for copies of the backyard photographs was Robert

    Groden's book THE KILLING OF A PRESIDENT. Mr. Mee felt that in

    several cases the copies I was able to show him enabled him to

    reach firm conclusions. On the other hand, as mentioned above,

    he also made it clear that he could not provide a firm opinion on

    certain issues due to the nature of these copies and to his not

    being able to view the original materials.

    For the sake of convenience and organization, I placed subject

    headings in the 22-page extract that I provided to Mr. Mee.

    All testimony from PHOTOS.ZIP pertaining to these subjects

    was included. The headings were as follows: "On Using Frame Edge

    Markings and Scratches for Authentication"; "Frame Edge Markings

    on 133-A (DeM) and the 133-B Negative"; "Imperial Reflex

    Scratches on the Backyard Photos"; "Photogrammetry and the

    Backyard Photos"; "Lines in the Chin Area?"; "The Shape of the

    Chin"; "Varying Exposure Analysis and Faked Shadows"; "Digital

    Image Processing"; "Nose Shadow vs. Body and Rifle Shadows";

    "Duplicating the Nose Shadow?"; "Change of Expression?";

    "Backyard Measurements and Stereo Pairs"; "Answering Jack White";

    "General Comments"; "McCamy on the Possibility of Fakery."

    Mr. Mee stated that the opinions he expressed were his own, and

    that he was not speaking on behalf of any government agency.

    The reader will notice that during the interview I read several

    lengthy sections from Kirk and McCamy's testimony. I explained

    to Mr. Mee before we went on tape that I would be reading

    extensively from the extract in order to provide those who

    would read this transcript with the necessary context and

    background.

    There is one issue about which I would like to further consult

    with Mr.. Mee, and that is his theory of how the backyard photos

    could have been faked. In explaining his theory, he drew

    diagrams and referred to them throughout his explanation. This

    was the only point in our interview when I wished I had video

    taped it as well as audio taped it. The reader might find it

    somewhat hard to follow Mr. Mee's explanation without being able

    to see the diagrams to which he was referring. I should say,

    however, that I think one can still get the general idea of what

    Mr. Mee was saying on this subject. Nevertheless, in reading the

    explanation of his theory, some follow-up questions occur to me

    that I will be asking him in the near future. I am certain he

    will answer them, and when he does I will post his answers as a

    supplement to this transcript.

    Following my interview with Mr. Mee, I spoke with other

    professional photographers and photo lab technicians, as well as

    with serious, experienced amateur photographers. They did not

    know that the questions they were answering were related to the

    Kennedy assassination. I posed my questions in relation to a

    hypothetical photo of a doll in someone's yard. When it came to

    the issue of water spots and the nearly straight line that

    runs across Oswald's chin, I simply asked what the chances

    were that the edge of a water spot would form a nearly straight

    line. Some of the people with whom I consulted included the

    following:

    * Mr. Konrad Mandl, a professional photographer and photo

    lab technician, and a certified member of the British Institute

    of Professional Photography.

    * Miss Davette Johnson, a professional photographer and photo

    lab technician, and a computer graphics technician.

    * Mr. Jerry Finzi, professional photographer

    * Mr. Mark Loundy, professional photographer.

    * Mr. Arthur Kramer, a professional photographer who has taught

    photography at the collegiate level. In addition, Mr. Kramer

    wrote a column for MODERN PHOTOGRAPHY magazine for 20 years

    called "The View from Kramer."

    * Mr. Steven Newbould, a photo lab technician at the Harrogate

    Photographic Laboratories, Harrogate, England.

    All of the professionals and serious amateurs with whom I spoke

    corroborated Mr. Mee's views on the issues about which I asked

    them.

    For example, Mr. Mee expressed considerable skepticism about the

    photographic panel's claim that the irregular line across the

    chin was actually the edge of a water spot. This line is nearly

    straight, and Mr. Mee said this was one of the reasons that he

    doubted the panel's assertion. Miss Johnson told me that in all

    her years in photography she had never seen the edge of a water

    spot form a nearly straight line. Mr. Mandl said it would be

    unusual for the edge of a water spot to form a nearly straight

    line. Similarly, Mr. Kramer stated that such an occurrence would

    be "unlikely."

    Mr. Mee disputed the photographic panel's claim that a vanishing

    point analysis could explain the conflicting shadows in the

    backyard photos. I did not discuss this subject with Miss

    Johnson or Mr. Mandl, but I did question my other photographic

    sources on the issue, and their responses were quite revealing.

    I asked them if a vanishing point analysis could explain why the

    facial and body shadows on my hypothetical doll did not fall in

    the same direction. I asked them to assume that the facial

    shadows fell straight down, but that the body shadows fell off in

    approximately a ten o'clock position (which is what we see in the

    backyard snapshots). Every single one of them insisted that the

    described shadow variations were not possible without two

    different light sources, and none of them expressed the view

    that the variant shadows could be explained by a vanishing point

    analysis.

    Mr. Mee said that the film grain patterns in the backyard photos

    could have been matched if the forger knew what he was doing and

    took care to match the film speed. Mr. Mandl agreed that a

    skillful forger could match film grain patterns in a composite

    picture. Mr. Newbould said he believed that grain patterns could

    be matched in a fake photo, but he added that he wanted more

    information before commenting further on my question. Mr. Mandl

    and Mr. Newbould were the only two persons that I asked to

    comment on this topic.

    ------------------------

    Mr. Mee's Qualifications

    ------------------------

    Mr. Mee is a Depart of Defense (DOD) photographer and photo lab

    technician. He has worked in photography for 18 years. He has

    been a DOD photographer and photo lab technician for 10 years.

    Among other things, Mr. Mee has studied and had on-the-job

    training in negative retouching, print development, shadows,

    and negative analysis.

    In addition, he has had technical courses in color print

    development and color negative development at the Winona School

    of Photography, which is affiliated with the Professional

    Photographers of America School. He has also had courses in

    automatic printing and in using computer video analyzers at the

    KODAK School of Photography in Rochester, New York.

    -----------------------

    Transcript of Interview

    -----------------------

    [Mr. Mee and MTG watch a segment on the DeMohrenschildt photo

    from Jack White's video FAKE: THE FORGED PHOTO THAT FRAMED LEE

    HARVEY OSWALD. The segment is about the DeMohrenschildt photo

    and how its superior detail and clarity indicate that it was

    taken with a different, better camera.]

    MTG. All right, the thing about the DeMohrenschildt photo not

    being a copy of 133-A because it has much better detail and a

    larger background. Does that make sense?

    MR. MEE. It wouldn't be a copy of 133-A if it had more detail

    because, if anything, the reverse would be true, since you always

    lose, you never gain, when you copy something. You lose detail,

    definition, and contrast is built up. You start to lose your

    gray tones, which hold most of your detail, and it starts to go

    into shadow or [tape unclear]. So, it wouldn't be a copy.

    The DeMohrenschildt photo would not be a copy of 133-A.

    MTG. Could it have been printed off of the negative of 133-A,

    even though it has better contrast and everything? I mean, Jack

    White seems to think that because the DeMohrenschildt photo

    has such better quality, that it must have been made with a

    better camera. Is it logical to assume that it was taken with

    a better camera?

    MR. MEE. There are two possibilities that come to mind. That is

    one of them--that it was done with a better camera. The other

    one is that it was an earlier copy of the negative and that 133-A

    is a second- or third-generation copy. To say that the

    DeMohrenschildt photo was done with a better quality camera is

    possible, and, it is likely, in this situation, the more probable

    of the two choices.

    MTG. Let me just see how we're sounding so far.

    [Audio tape is stopped, rewound some, and then played back to

    check sound quality. Mr. Mee and MTG then watch Jack White video

    segment on how the frame edge markings and scratches could have

    been produced.]

    MTG. Your comments on that?

    MR. MEE. One comment is on the theory that you an oval cutout

    area was filled in with a figure. Cutting an oval out and then

    inserting a body and then a head--I think that would be just too

    difficult to accomplish without leaving tell-tale signs. You're

    allowing too many areas where your tampering can be detected.

    You're multiplying your suspected area by a whole bunch, as

    opposed to just putting the head on and [tape unclear]. That

    would be a little bit easier to do. That could be done. But

    when you have to retouch such a large area, I think that would be

    picked up. It would leave too many tell-tale signs. I wouldn't

    really agree with that.

    MTG. So, then, the first way that White suggested, of making an

    exposure with just the edge markings on it, and then combining

    this with the composite photo. . . .

    MR. MEE. Yes, that could be done. It's feasible to do something

    like that. The process of the sandwiching, though, might be a

    little difficult to hide. This is not to say that it couldn't

    be done, but then you'd be dealing with another negative and

    probably with different characteristics.

    But, the idea that a negative was shot that just had the edge

    markings on it, and only the edge markings--something like that

    would be difficult to achieve.

    If you took the film and wound it across the IR camera without

    making an exposure, and then developed that negative, you'd have

    a clear type of, well, what we call an overlay, which you could

    combine with a picture, instead of actually shooting any type of

    picture through the IR camera. You see, otherwise, as soon as

    you--even with the cap on--as soon as you open that up, you're

    still going to get some type of traces of a different negative.

    Now you could sandwich them together, and, again, we're talking

    about making a print, and then working with that print and then

    copying it. So that's a possibility. Something along those

    lines. I wouldn't go so far as to say that's how they did it,

    but it could have been done in this fashion.

    MTG. So they, possibly, took some film, dragged it across the

    film plane aperture, but did not snap a picture? Then, they

    took the film out and that would have given them an overlay?

    MR. MEE. Yes, that would give you an acetate overlay, a clear

    film. Once you develop it, since it hasn't been struck by

    light, it will come out clear. So then, you could place your

    composite onto the acetate overlay and make a print and then copy

    the print with a different camera. It would be possible to do

    that.

    MTG. So what would. . . .

    MR. MEE. But there's one thing: Keep in mind that if you

    copied the print with the IR, you would have multiple streaks and

    edge marks. And you would probably have a shadowing type of

    effect, or a ghosting type of effect, where you'd get one and

    then another one close by. Even if they had tried to drag the

    film through the camera again exactly as they had done before, I

    think you would still be able to pick up slight variations in the

    marks with a microscope.

    MTG. Okay.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the fact

    that the photographic panel omitted the nose, earlobe, and chin

    measurements in the backyard photos from its Penrose study.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Just pretty much what I said last time. You don't do

    that kind of a study and then leave out relevant measurements.

    I'm surprised that the chin measurement wasn't considered. The

    guys on that panel knew that the chin in these pictures was a

    disputed area, according to the other articles that you gave me.

    MTG. Oh, yes. They knew. The chin had been disputed for a long

    time before that.

    MR. MEE. Uh-huh. Well, that just makes it harder to understand

    how they could have left it out when they did their calculations.

    MTG. Could they have done this because the chin, and the other

    things, threw off the total measurements too much?

    MR. MEE. Let me put it this way: I don't know what they would

    have left out ANY measurements, especially the chin, of all

    things.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG then view Jack White video segment on the

    idea that the DeMohrenschildt photo was somehow produced without

    the IR camera negative, and that the backyard photos could have

    been made prior to being made with the IR camera.]

    MTG. Any comments on that?

    MR. MEE. It's quite possible.

    MTG. So the DeMohrenschildt picture indicates that the backyard

    photos could have been made before they were made with the IR

    camera and that a better camera was used? I mean. . . .

    MR. MEE. I think I know what you're getting at. When you

    start talking about high-quality cameras, you're talking about

    the lens not as much as the camera, and you would use a high-

    quality lens to copy things, because you want to try to reduce

    the aberrations and the contrasts, and all the things that go

    with an inferior-quality lens when you're copying. You're

    already losing something. You don't want to lose anything else.

    So you use the best type of lens that you can get. So, that's

    consistent with what would be normal practice if you had a

    picture that was being worked on. You would copy that picture

    with a more expensive camera, to preserve as much of the quality

    as possible.

    And, with the edge markings, you're talking about more of an

    original type of negative, or rather an original type of a print

    from a full negative. That's not to say that would be

    the original print, or the original negative. You could take

    a print and copy it, and you would still get the edge markings,

    but it would be printed full negative, as in the case of the

    DeMohrenschildt photo. That would be the only difference,

    whereas with the other pictures you might not be seeing the

    full print.

    During that time [the 1960s], they would do a certain amount of

    cropping on the edges. This is done quite often with automatic

    printers. You'll look at the picture and say, "Wait a second.

    Why is this person's hand cut off, when I can see it on the

    negative?" So that's pretty customary.

    MTG. How much of the picture on the negative would one usually

    expect to be cropped? I mean, like, if you were going to give a

    percentage, would you say it would be cropped 20 percent? Ten

    percent?

    MR. MEE. Well, you can't really say, because it depends on the

    format. It depends on a lot of factors. It depends on the

    machine you're using. It depends on the enlarger you're using,

    and the operator who's using it. It gets back to format. For

    example, say you've got a 35mm negative. To get a 35mm print,

    full negative--for instance in a 7 X 10. . . . [pauses] But most

    people don't have 7 X 10 frames; they have 8 X 10 frames. So,

    what has to happen is that it has to be blown up so that the 7

    goes to an 8, but then you have to cut off the edges. In that

    situation, you would cut off about 20 percent of the picture. So

    that's one example of how cropping can come into play. There are

    a lot of variables. It's hard to say.

    MTG. Okay. So now. . . .

    MR. MEE. I would say that normally, when you're copying a

    picture, you'll want to crop in enough to where you can't see the

    edging. Your attempt is to try to get in as much of the original

    picture as possible, if you're trying to get the fullest picture

    possible without the edging.

    To get in as much as possible, you'd cut it really close. You'd

    want to crop it enough so that you couldn't see whatever was on

    the edges. You wouldn't want to be able to see the edging of the

    picture which has a texture and has fibers in it.

    MTG. Before we move on to other areas, am I right in saying

    that it is your position that the presence of the frame edge

    markings and the scratches alone is not absolute proof of the

    backyard photos' authenticity?

    MR. MEE. Right. I'm not convinced that those markings prove

    that the photos weren't doctored.

    MTG. Okay. The next area, then.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on Oswald's

    expression in the backyard photos. White's view is that the

    person in the picture could not have gone from the smile

    to the frown without noticeably moving surrounding facial

    muscles.]

    MTG. Any comments on that?

    MR. MEE. Well, I don't think that's a significant piece of

    evidence. Every person is different. The degree that you're

    smiling or frowning can be ever so subtle. The facial muscles

    don't have to change that much. They [the other muscles]

    wouldn't necessarily be noticed in these photographs.

    Granted, if he had a big grin, it would change a lot of different

    things. It would change smile lines, the way the light hits him,

    what kinds of shadows would be created. Or, if he had a big

    frown. The difference in expression in those two photographs

    appears to be ever so slight, but it's hard to tell without

    looking at enlargements of the originals. It's possible that the

    frown or the smile was retouched. Both could have been

    retouched.

    MTG. The HSCA photographic panel said that the different

    expressions--the smile and the frown--showed that this was not

    the same head pasted onto separate photographs.

    MR. MEE. Right. Well, it's possible that the mouth was

    retouched. The heads in the photos could be the same head. But,

    I don't think that that argument alone is a strong argument for

    saying that the same head appears in all the photos. There are

    other things that are more compelling as evidence that the same

    head was used. The mouth could have been retouched.

    Or, there could have been more than one photograph taken of his

    [Oswald's] head, and then those pictures could have been used in

    the photos. You could use two heads just as easily as you could

    use one. But that wouldn't change the problems with the lighting

    characteristics, the shadows. If two photos of the head were

    used, they were photographed in one setting, and with the head in

    the same position in each picture.

    MTG. Right. Oh, by the way, it's interesting that Kirk and

    McCamy criticized Jack White's use of overlays, but in order to

    detect the smile and the frown they themselves used overlays.

    MR. MEE. Yeah. [Mr. Mee smiles noticeably as he says this.]

    MTG. Okay, let's see. Where's my copy of the extract? Oh, yes.

    I'd like to ask you about the two other things that were

    mentioned as evidence that the same head was not used, namely the

    differences in the eyes and the puffing of the lower lip in the

    frown.. The argument is that this is more evidence that the

    heads aren't all the same.

    MR. MEE. Well, you could make that argument. I'm not ruling out

    the possibility that two heads were used. The differences in the

    eyes would indicate that more than one photo of the head was

    used. But, from looking at these photographs here, it's hard for

    me to tell.. [Mr. Mee points to the mouth and the eyes, and then

    pauses to examine the photos.]

    Could we look at that segment again? What I want to see is that

    part that shows the head enlarged.

    MTG. Sure.

    [The portion of the video segment showing the head enlargements

    is replayed twice. Mr. Mee then looks at the book copies of the

    photos again.]

    MR. MEE.. I can see a slight difference in the eyes. But, you

    can't say that these things couldn't have been retouched either.

    I really wish. . . .

    MTG. Including the. . . . Oh, I'm sorry.

    MR. MEE. No, go ahead.

    MTG. Including the eyes? The eyes could have been retouched?

    MR. MEE. The eyes could have been retouched. But, on the other

    hand, when you're looking at a negative, and you're trying to

    determine which photo goes with which negative, one of the things

    you look for is the subtlety of the smile, because it can change,

    ever so slightly. So, it's possible that more than one

    photograph of Oswald's head was used.

    It's hard to tell from the pictures I'm looking at here. If I

    had the originals, I could make a better determination. After

    looking at the enlargements on the video, and at all these

    copies [of the photos] again, my guess would be that two pictures

    of the head were used, and that the head was photographed at

    around noon. But, when the one head was put on at a tilt, the

    nose and eye shadows were overlooked. That [the idea that two

    head pictures were used] would be the more logical assumption.

    But, again, this isn't to say that the mouth and eyes couldn't

    have been retouched enough to create these differences. I'd

    really have to look at the originals.

    MTG. Okay. McCamy also brought up the fact that the lower

    lip. . . .

    [side one of the first tape runs out. The tape is flipped over

    and reinserted into the recorder.]

    MTG. Okay. We got cut off there. I was going to ask you about

    the puffing out of the lower lip.

    MR. MEE. Yes. That really doesn't say a whole lot in terms of

    whether or not there's been retouching or if more than one photo

    of the head was used.

    MTG. Okay. I've got another segment I'd like to show you.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the stance

    of the figure in the backyard photos.]

    MTG. Okay. The problem with the center of weight and also with

    the stance when the figure is reversed--any comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, I'm not sure exactly what Mr. White's trying to

    say by pointing this out. Granted, the figure is standing there

    in an awkward position, regardless of the head. The head here

    doesn't seem to have any bearing on how this person is standing.

    Maybe that's what he's trying to point out.

    But the nature of photography is that you're catching the subject

    in an instant. And to say that people stand or walk around all

    the time in complete balance is not feasible. We see people off

    balance in photographs all the time. He [the figure in the

    backyard photos] could have been shifting his weight, or starting

    to walk, or taking a step backwards. There are a lot of

    different things that he could have done to make his stance look

    odd. It does look odd, mind you. Certainly it does look odd.

    But I don't know that you can say that the stance is not natural.

    MTG. What about the claim that the figure's center of gravity

    lies outside his weight-bearing foot? If this is actually the

    case, what would that mean?

    MR. MEE. Well, to me it is a moot point. People don't always

    stand perfectly balanced. You see this all the time. I don't

    know exactly what the suggestion is here. If it's that the body

    was retouched in some way, I'd have a problem with that. I don't

    know why, if someone went to such lengths to fake these

    photographs--I don't know why they would need to retouch the legs

    or the upper body.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the conflicting

    body shadows.]

    MR. MEE. Can we watch that segment again?

    [Video segment is shown several times.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, something is definitely wrong with the body

    shadows. I don't see quite the difference that Mr. White does,

    but I do see a difference. I don't know that I would say that

    one body shadow is right at ten o'clock and that the other one is

    right at twelve o'clock.

    MTG. Well, I think he's phrasing the differences in terms

    of approximations. In other words, he's not saying that one's in

    a perfect ten o'clock position and that the other's right at a

    twelve o'clock position. Let's watch the segment again.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    [Video segment is reviewed again.]

    MTG. You see what I mean?

    MR. MEE. Right. Okay. And, as I said, I can see that there's a

    difference in the body shadows. They seem to have been made

    at different times of the day.

    Now, if I you wanted to make every possible allowance for body

    movement or camera movement, or both, I could see how you could

    perhaps say that the time difference between these pictures was a

    matter of minutes, several minutes, as far as when the body

    shadows were made. I could see how you could reach this

    conclusion.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. Now, the shadows cast by the head and the neck in

    133-A--they look odd to me.

    MTG. How so?

    MR.. MEE. Well, the shadow of the neck looks too narrow. And the

    head--I don't know if its shadow should angle off that much, when

    it doesn't do that in B or C. The shadow cast by the neck is

    thicker in B and C too. These could be real shadows, mind you,

    but they do look a little off to me.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. It's hard to say, though. It would really help if I

    could look at the originals. Again, they could be real shadows.

    I'm just saying that looking at them here, they do seem a little

    strange.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the fact that

    in 133-C the body shadow runs up onto the fence, whereas the

    body shadows in A and B don't.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, to say that these photographs were taken within

    seconds of each other, I think, is impossible. There's just too

    much variance in the directions in the body shadows. They [the

    body shadows] have definitely changed positions.

    Now, about that C photograph--and, again, this is without looking

    at the original--but what could cause that [the shadow running up

    onto the fence] would be if the figure were a little farther

    back. You've got to consider any lean, too. The weight shift

    here [in 133-C], so that he's leaning back more, could cause

    the shadow to go up onto the fence.. It wouldn't take that much

    of a shift or lean to make it go up onto the fence. I don't

    think that's an unreasonable amount. I mean, you can see this

    for yourself by standing in front of a bright light. You can see

    how much you can change the length of your shadow just by leaning

    a little bit.

    MTG. Okay. So the body shadow on the fence, that is, the head

    going up onto the fence, could be due to a slight shift or lean?

    MR. MEE. Right. And, by the way, I think the suggestion that

    two different people were used, wearing the same clothes, is

    really unlikely. I don't think they would have used two

    different bodies, especially ones that were different heights.

    MTG. Right. That makes sense.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the blurriness

    of the right-hand fingers in 133-A.]

    MTG. Okay. On the blurriness of the fingers on his right hand.

    MR. MEE. Well, yeah, that's the way it appears. But that could

    have been caused by a couple different things. He could have

    been moving that hand. Or, light might have been reflecting off

    the newspaper and into the shadow areas of the hand, which would

    take away some of the detail around the fingers. If his hand

    were slightly angled, just ever so slightly, and with the

    reflection from the newspaper, that would make the fingers look

    stubby too. Those are more likely possibilities. I don't know

    why a retouch artist would have tampered with anything in that

    area.

    MTG. Yeah, you'd think they would have had the guy just hold the

    newspapers, and so they wouldn't have to do any retouching there.

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Okay. Now, in this next segment. . . . Well, let's take

    a look at it.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on White's finding

    that when he enlarged the figure in 133-A to match Oswald's

    height of 5 feet 9 inches, the length of the rifle was too long,

    and that when be brought the rifles to the same size, to match

    the alleged murder weapon's official size of 40.2 inches, the

    figure appeared to be six inches too short.]

    MTG. Okay. What are your thoughts on this?

    MR. MEE. The person's height could be different, and that would

    be another indication of fraud in these photos. I don't know

    why they would have used a stand-in who was so much shorter than

    Oswald, though. You'd think they would have gotten someone who

    was about Oswald's height.

    MTG. Along that line, one of the Oswald impersonators was

    said by two or three witnesses to be quite a bit shorter than

    Oswald.

    MR. MEE. Huh. That's interesting. Well, I'd have to examine

    Mr. White's methodology more closely before I reached any

    conclusions here, though. When you're doing these kinds of

    comparisons, you've got to figure in other factors, like

    whether or not there was any tilting of the camera, how the

    person was standing, the relationship to other objects in the

    picture, that sort of thing. But. . . .

    MTG. Does the figure look like it's leaning or tilted very much?

    MR. MEE. Well, I was just about to say that the figure doesn't

    look like he's leaning to the point that it would be that hard to

    determine the height.. He appears to be standing pretty much

    straight up. Now, you don't know exactly how the camera was

    being held, but I wouldn't guess that it was held way off

    balance, to look at these pictures.

    [Phone rings. Tape recorder is placed on pause. After MTG

    hangs up the phone, the interview is resumed but the recorder is

    accidentally left on pause. After about a minute, MTG realizes

    that tape recorder is still on pause.]

    MTG. Okay. We had a little snafu there. Let me ask you

    this again. What is your opinion of Jack White's work overall?

    MR. MEE. Well, overall, I'd say it's pretty good. I don't agree

    with some of it. I think he's reading too much into certain

    things. But, in general, I think he's on the right track. I

    mean, from everything I've seen so far, from all the copies and

    everything that I've looked at so far, I would say he's made some

    valid arguments.

    MTG. Well, you know that British photographic expert mentioned

    in the video, Jeffrey Crowley, looked at White's work and was

    quite impressed with it.

    MR. MEE. Uh-huh. Yeah, I remember that. I mean, the guy [Jack

    White] does make some mistakes, but overall he makes a pretty

    good case.

    MTG. Okay. Fair enough.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view the Jack White video segment on the

    conflict between the backyard figure's chin and Oswald's chin,

    and on the line that goes from one side of the neck, across the

    chin, to the other side of the neck.]

    MTG. Okay. I think I'll bracket the issue of the shape of the

    chin. I've got a lot of pictures of Oswald, going clear back

    into his junior high or high school days, and they all show him

    with a sharp, cleft chin. I know in his testimony, McCamy said

    he found some pictures of Oswald as a youth in which his chin was

    a little broader and slightly flat. Even Congressman Fithian

    wasn't convinced, and I haven't found that to be the case at all

    in the photos that I have of Oswald as a youth. This isn't the

    issue anyway, since the backyard photos supposedly show Oswald

    as an adult. And all the photos of Oswald as an adult show

    him with a sharp, cleft chin. I'd like to return to the

    issue of the chin later when we discuss McCamy's claim that

    the edge of the chin disappears in shadow.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. I'd also like to hold off on discussing the line across

    the chin until we review McCamy's argument that it was caused

    by a water spot. All right?

    MR. MEE. That's fine.

    MTG. I just wanted to show you that segment to provide some

    background for when we get to those issues in a few minutes.

    MR. MEE. All right.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the conflicts

    between the nose shadow and the neck and body shadows, and

    on the non-movement of the nose shadow even when the head is

    tilted.]

    MTG. Comments?

    MR. MEE. Well, I think this is the area where you get into the

    most convincing evidence that these photographs have been

    doctored--the lighting characteristics. You can see in these

    photographs that the nose and eye shadows do not match the neck

    shadow. They don't match the shadow that falls down from the

    body either. They don't match. We only have one sun, and that's

    the problem. Even if we had two suns, their light still could

    not produce the differences in the shadows in the backyard

    photos. And I think that all the things that that panel [the

    photographic panel] cited to substantiate these photos aren't

    nearly as important as the shadow characteristics.

    MTG. I was going to ask you about that later, but as long

    as we're on the subject. . . . Now, McCamy, instead of dealing

    with the problems in the shadows themselves, appealed to a

    vanishing point analysis. He never actually got around to

    explaining why the nose and eye shadows drop straight down,

    while, on the other hand, you have a big patch of light on the

    left side of the neck; and why you have the body shadows in A and

    C falling at about a ten o'clock position. Instead, of dealing

    head-on with those problems, he appealed to a vanishing point

    analysis. We'll get into this more later, but for right now I'd

    like to ask you if you think that an analysis of that kind can

    overrule what you're able to see in the photos themselves as far

    as the contrasting shadows?

    MR. MEE. No, not at all. The shadows themselves, the different

    angles that they show, their shape, the areas that they should

    cover but don't--these have got to be dealt with directly. No

    form of analysis is going to convince me that those shadows are

    not different shadow groups.

    MTG. Okay. Now. . . .

    MR. MEE. Let me give you a little background on why I say this.

    There are a lot of ways to alter shadows in photography. But in

    this situation, where the figure was outdoors, during the day,

    and where there was only one light source, there is just no way

    that all the shadows in these photos could have occurred at the

    same time of day.

    Now, it could be argued that the reason there is more light on

    the neck in 133-A is that you're getting a reflection off the

    newspaper, but in B and C the newspaper is out to the side,

    and. . . .

    MTG. The patch of light is still there. . . .

    MR. MEE. It's still there. It's still consistent. And that

    shouldn't be. Most of the neck on both sides should be in

    shadow, to be consistent with the eye and nose shadows.

    And the nose shadow should not stay in that V-shape, coming

    straight down onto the upper lip, when the head is tilted. Now,

    with the tilt of the head here, you wouldn't see a big difference

    in the nose shadow, but you would see some difference. The shape

    and the angle would change. It [the nose shadow] shouldn't look

    like that with the head tilted.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on two unnatural

    bulges in the backyard photos, one in the neck in 133-A and the

    other in the post in 133-B, and on the fact that these bulges are

    parallel to each other.]

    MR. MEE. Can we see that again?

    [Video segment is replayed several times.]

    MTG. On the bulges. Any comments on the bulges and on the fact

    that they're parallel to each other? Could it be that a

    retoucher might have goofed on the neck, spotted it, and then

    decided to move the goof to the post in the hope that if he

    moved it to a background image it would be less noticeable?

    MR. MEE. Even good retouchers sometimes make small errors. I

    can see the bulges. I can see what he's [Mr. White's] talking

    about here. This goes along with the theory that these are

    composite photographs and that they would have required

    retouching.

    MTG. Now, in the photographic panel's report. . . . Well, the

    panel apparently had a hard time explaining the bulge in the

    post. The theory that the panel put in writing was that the

    indentation was an optical illusion caused by the shadow of a

    twig. . . .

    [side two of the first tape runs out. Tape is removed, and

    another tape is placed in the tape recorder.]

    MTG. Okay. Let's go over that again. I'm going to read

    the explanation given by the photographic panel:

    What could be perceived as an indentation in the

    post in CE 133-B is believed by the undersigned to

    be an illusion resulting from the location of a

    shadow of a branch or a leaf along the edge of the

    post.

    Okay, and you said you have a problem with that.

    MR. MEE. Well, the problem I have with that, keeping in mind

    the angle of the body shadows and others, is that a branch or a

    leaf here would have been struck by sun coming from around a four

    o'clock position. Therefore, a branch or leaf shadow here would

    fall in about a ten or eleven o'clock position, and so I don't

    think the bulge here could have resulted from a natural shadow.

    With the sun coming in from a four o'clock angle, I don't see how

    that bulge could have been caused by the shadow from a branch or

    a leaf. The angle's not right. Can we look at the part about

    this in the video again?

    MTG. Sure..

    [Video segment is replayed. Afterwards, Mr. Mee then examines

    the book and xeroxed copies of the photos again.]

    MR. MEE. No, I don't see how that bulge could have been caused

    by a shadow from a branch or a leaf. I don't see it. The shadow

    angle would be wrong. The sun's in the wrong position to do

    that. I'd like to see the originals, though. For a small detail

    like this, you want to look at the original photos.. But from

    what I can see here, I really don't think this bulge was caused

    by any kind of a branch or a leaf shadow--not with the sun

    shining the way it is in these pictures.

    What about the bulge in the neck? How do they explain it? I

    didn't see that discussed anywhere in the extract.

    MTG. No, Kirk and McCamy didn't deal with that. There's nothing

    about it in that file [PHOTOS.ZIP]. I don't know if the panel's

    report deals with it either. I don't think the panel tried to

    explain it.. If they had offered an explanation, I think Groden

    and Livingstone would have tried to answer it. I could be wrong,

    though. It's kind of hard to believe they wouldn't have tried to

    explain this, but I don't know. I still haven't gotten a copy of

    the panel's report. So I really don't know.

    MR. MEE. Okay. Well, that neck bulge needs to be explained. It

    doesn't look natural, and it's parallel to the bulge in the post.

    It disappears in 133-B, but then you have an indentation in the

    post [in B].

    MTG. Uh-huh. In his HSCA testimony, Jack White suggested that

    the forger's knife slipped and caused the post bulge. Could

    something like that have caused the bulge in the neck?

    MR. MEE. Possibly. Something's definitely off there.

    MTG. Oh, I wanted to ask you about McCamy's explanation of the

    indentation in the post.

    MR. MEE. All right.

    MTG. Let me read it here. He was referring to a computer

    printout that was produced by digital image processing.

    Our inspection of this leads us to believe that

    the apparent indentation is simply a shadow,

    because if you look very carefully, you can see

    the post running through that area, and this is

    just a slight darkening. So that was merely a

    shadow.

    MR. MEE. No, I don't think that's consistent with the direction

    of the sun in the pictures. It's not consistent with the way the

    bulge looks.

    MTG. So, just to summarize, you're saying that the sun,

    according to the body shadow, isn't in a position where it

    could cause a shadow that would produce the indentation

    in the post?

    MR. MEE. That's how it looks to me.

    MTG. Just to let you know, to my knowledge the panel never

    identified which leaf or branch could have possibly caused such a

    shadow. They simply said the bulge COULD have been caused by the

    shadow from a leaf or a branch, but they didn't say which leaf or

    branch.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    [Mr. Mee and MTG view Jack White video segment on the fact that

    a patch of sunlight on the side of the house beside the post

    holding the stairway does not change shape in any of the backyard

    pictures, indicating that the camera making the photo did not

    move horizontally. This patch of light is to the left of the

    post and is roughly parallel with the figure's right elbow.]

    MTG. Now, on the non-movement of that one shadow underneath

    the stairway. If it doesn't change shape or position, even

    though the pictures were supposedly taken with a hand-held

    camera, what does that say? I'm asking this because, supposedly,

    she [Marina] took the first picture. Snap. Then, Oswald came,

    took the camera from her, advanced the film, handed it back to

    her, and then went back to where he was. She then had to and

    position the camera again. And then this process was REPEATED

    for the third picture. So how could that patch of light not

    change in some way?

    MR. MEE. The possibility that that patch of light would stay

    in the same position and maintain the same shape after all that

    movement is remote. You'd need a tripod, and even then you'd

    have to be careful. Can we see that again?

    [Video segment is replayed several times.]

    MR. MEE. I think I can see what he's talking about, but can we

    look at that a couple more times?

    [Video segment is replayed two more times.]

    MR. MEE. Okay, let me take another look at these pictures really

    quickly.

    MTG. Oh, sure. Take your time.

    [Mr. Mee studies pictures for approximately one minute.]

    MTG. Do you see what he's talking about?

    MR. MEE. Yes. I would agree with that.

    MTG. So wouldn't that be almost impossible using a hand-held

    camera, especially given the way that these pictures were

    supposedly taken?

    MR. MEE. I would say it would be nearly impossible. The chances

    of something like that happening would be astronomically small.

    MTG. All right. . . .

    MR. MEE. Even if you were using a modern camera, one that would

    automatically advance the film after each shot, and were taking

    a series of pictures, your chances of achieving that effect

    would be low. They'd be better, but still very low.

    MTG. All right. Now, if I'm not mistaken, I think we have just

    one more segment.

    [MTG starts to play the video tape and then realizes there are no

    more video segments.]

    MTG. Nope. That was it. That was the last of the segments.

    MR. MEE. All right.

    MTG. Okay. Now, a little while back, I got a message on

    CompuServe from a gentleman named Paul Burke. In reference to

    Jack White's secondary method for producing the frame edge

    markings on the photos, he said, "Copying a photo assembled from

    a group of photos as you and others have postulated using the

    Imperial Reflex camera has a problem. Its focus ability, if any,

    is limited, so the master montage would have to be large, a

    couple of feet or so," which you said last time you didn't argue

    with. . . .

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Okay, and then he continues, "and it would have all sorts

    of granular discontinuities between the segments making it up,

    such as sharp lines for the cuts, etc., etc."

    MR. MEE. Well, I'd have to know more about the scenario he

    has in mind. What are we talking about here? I mean, how

    were the first pictures taken? What was in them? How many

    copies are we talking about?

    The appearance of your final product will depend on several

    factors. It's going to depend on things like the quality of your

    original photos, the camera, the enlarging equipment and

    materials, and the retouching. There are a lot of things

    that would come into play.

    As far as size goes, it probably would be a rather large

    photograph in this scenario. Your composite--it would have to be

    a rather big picture. With the lighting in these pictures [the

    backyard photos], I would guess that they used medium-speed film.

    But there are so many things you'd have to establish first before

    you made a judgment. And, also, the farther down the line you go

    from your original, the more quality you're going to lose.

    MTG. Okay. . . .

    MR. MEE. Another thing--these pictures ARE grainy. I'm talking

    about A, B, and C. They are not that sharp. They do have a

    lot of texture and grain to them. Plus, you've got that

    tell-tale line running across the chin, and the other things

    [i.e., the bulge in the neck in 133-A and the indentation in the

    post in 133-B].

    MTG. All right. This thing about the chin, the lines across the

    chin in 133-A. Now, in the extract, we read that McCamy was

    POSITIVE that the line that runs from one side of the neck to the

    other, crossing the chin--that that line was caused by a water

    spot. The panel as a whole, however, did not go this far. In

    the report it says that the cause of the lines has not been

    definitely determined. But I wanted to ask you what you thought

    of McCamy's explanation?

    MR. MEE. Well, I was reading through that, and I had some

    problems with it. The. . . .

    [side one of second tape runs out. Tape is flipped over, and

    the interview resumes.]

    MTG. Okay. So you said you had some problems with McCamy's

    explanation, with his claim that the irregular line across

    the chin was caused by a water spot. This is the line that

    Jack White mentions as well.

    MR. MEE. Well, there are a couple things. One thing is the

    sheer coincidence that this line just happens to fall in the chin

    area; that this one edge of this one particular water spot is

    supposed to have left deposits in such a way as to form a line

    that coincidentally starts at one side of the neck, crosses the

    chin, and then ends at the other side--right where Oswald's head

    could have been attached to the body. I mean, this would be a

    good place to join a head to a body in a composite, in the chin

    area, and here we have a line in that region, and it's supposed

    to be a water spot.

    The other problem I have with what he says has to do with

    his statements about the line as a photographic image.

    MTG. Now, this is just before he starts talking about water

    spots. You're talking about where he says the line isn't a

    photographic image.

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Again, that line is the one that Jack White discusses in

    the video, the one that starts off on one side of the upper neck,

    crosses the chin, and then goes to the other side of the neck.

    MR. MEE. Right.

    MTG. Just to give us some context here, why don't I go

    ahead and read exactly what he said about the line.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. Let's see. . . . Here it is. This was McCamy.

    Now that fine line is actually too fine to be a

    photographic image. The photographic image is

    made

    up of silver grains, and these grains are

    distributed all through here, so we have a good

    idea of their size and distribution. This line is

    a line that is much finer than the silver grains

    themselves. It is much too continuous to be a

    photographic line. A line that had been

    photographed from some kind of montage would have

    had the grain pattern of a discontinuous line, but

    this line is quite continuous. Indeed, we can

    follow this line down up to here and then back

    around to here. It is a closed loop.

    MR. MEE. Now, when you talk about what has been photographed--

    what you see in the picture--that has no bearing on the grains in

    the negative emulsion. The grains are more a characteristic of

    the film itself than what has been produced from a photographic

    print. So, when he ways, "This line is a line that is much finer

    than the silver grains themselves. This is much too continuous

    to be a photographic line"--this, to me, holds no water at all.

    He's looking at the A print, not at the negative, so his argument

    holds no water.

    [Mr. Mee again reads from the extract] "A line that had been

    photographed from some kind of montage would have had the

    grain pattern of a discontinuous line." Now, again, that's

    coming from a print, but what you'd need to look at would be the

    negative, and he didn't examine the A negative. So his

    argument is not valid. It doesn't prove anything. You see,

    the grain is a characteristic of the negative, not the print.

    I mean, even forgetting about that part of his argument, what

    he's saying is that it [the line] doesn't have a grain pattern

    running through it. The line is so fine that he says it's

    getting in between the grain, which would put it in the emulsion.

    It's like a sandwich, kind of like with two pieces of plastic,

    and then the water spot would be sitting on top. But I think

    that would be so obvious that there would be no doubt about it.

    When he says the line on the chin is part of a closed loop, I'm

    sort of at a disadvantage because I don't have the exhibit he was

    using. So it's hard for me to comment. But if that irregular

    line is part of a closed loop and was caused by a water spot,

    then the loop is the outline of the water spot. Now that line is

    almost straight, and water spots don't normally have edges like

    that. I mean, water spots . . . well . . . they're just that--

    they're spots. They're usually more oblique. They're not going

    to have long straight edges.

    And I'd like to see where the other edges of this loop are. I

    mean, they don't seem to be in the face. Just looking at these

    pictures here, I can see the line across the chin, but I don't

    see any other tell-tale lines in the face. So I'd like to know

    where the other edges [of the loop] are.

    MTG. Okay. What I'd like to do now is ask you about McCamy's

    point concerning what they saw when they examined the negative,

    the 133-B negative, with a phase contrast microscope. Let me

    just read that part, okay?

    MR. MEE. Sure.

    MTG. [Reading from the extract]

    We examined the negative with a phase contrast

    microscope, which would detect very, very small

    changes in thickness in the negative.

    He didn't come right out and say it, but I assume he was saying

    that they checked the negative with that high-powered microscope

    and didn't find any changes in thickness in the chin area in the

    negative.

    MR. MEE. Well, the thickness of the negative is not necessarily

    going to be relevant. What I'm saying is that the original

    photograph could have been copied and then a negative could have

    been made from that. So you're not going to see any difference

    in density in the negative if the negative came from a retouched

    photo.

    MTG. Uh-huh. Oh, let's go back to the water spot for just a

    second if we could. I wanted to ask you something else about

    what McCamy said about it.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. He said, "We did not see water spots. . . ." Now, in the

    extract the word "not" is missing, but it's obvious that that's

    what he was saying. As you read on, it's obvious that that's

    what he was saying. [Resumes reading]

    We did not see water spots on 133-B, but we do see

    that this same spot occurs on both of these first-

    generation prints of the A negative, so we know

    that the spot must have been on the negative.

    Any comments on that?

    MR. MEE. Well, to me, what he's saying is inconsistent. He's

    saying that the water spot had to be on the A negative because

    it's on the print, and that it's not part of the photographic

    image. But unless you see the negative, you can't really say

    that.

    MTG. Now, just for the record here, let me read what the

    [photographic] panel said about the irregular lines that

    appeared on the scanned image of the B negative. I'm reading

    from Groden and Livingstone's book HIGH TREASON.

    MR. MEE. Yes.

    MTG. Let me go ahead and read that out of the book.

    MR. MEE. Okay.

    MTG. They're quoting directly from the photographic panel's

    report. Let's see. . . . Here it is. [Reads from page

    201 of HIGH TREASON]

    Under very carefully adjusted display conditions,

    the scanned image of the Oswald backyard negative

    did exhibit irregular, very fine lines in the chin

    area.

    The panel went on to say that the lines were probably caused

    by "very faint water stains." Comments?

    MR. MEE. Yes, I meant to ask you about their reference to

    "lines," not just a single line. What other lines did they find?

    MTG. You know, to be honest, I don't know. I've wondered about

    that myself, because McCamy only mentioned one line that was

    found with digital image scanning.

    MR. MEE. Huh. Well, as far as what we just read, I would

    say it's evidence of tampering. I don't accept the idea that

    that line across the chin was caused by a water spot, at least

    not at this stage I don't. Now, again, I haven't seen the

    exhibit that shows the shape of the water spot that McCamy says

    caused the line, but I'd be surprised if it caused me to change

    my mind. I just don't think a water spot would leave that kind

    of a line.

    MTG. Okay. . . .

    [side two of second tape runs out. That tape is removed from the

    tape recorder and is replaced with the third tape.]

    MTG. Okay. Now, McCamy said that they examined the chin area

    with digital image processing and that they didn't find any

    granular inconsistencies.

    MR. MEE. Well, if you matched the film speed, using the kind of

    film that was common back then, it would be hard to prove

    something either way. Back then there was pretty much one way of

    making film.

    If you had a forger who knew his stuff and who knew the kinds

    of things that would be checked for later on, you'd have to

    guess that he would have done his best to match the grain

    characteristics. This wouldn't have been impossible. If

    he had access to the negatives of the pictures of Oswald's

    head, it could have been done.

    What I'm saying is that the tampering, the pasting of the head

    onto the figure's chin, could have been done well enough to where

    they [the members of the photographic panel] would not have been

    able to pick it up with the technology that they had at that

    time.

    MTG. Ah, here's the part I was looking for you. If I could,

    I'd like to read this to you. This is about the grain pattern

    again.

    One of the things that we wanted to do was to

    study the nature of the silver grain in the areas

    above the chin and below the chin, because of the

    allegation that there were two different

    photographs in some way. And so we did

    that. . . . And as photographic scientists, we

    found nothing remarkable about the grain pattern.

    This was the same type of grain pattern.

    MR. MEE. But, again, if the forger matched up the film, there

    wouldn't be any noticeable difference in the grain. It [digital

    image processing] would be inconclusive. Now, I'm not saying

    this would not be an easy process. It would all depend on if

    you had the negatives of the pictures of the head.

    MTG. To match the film, you mean.

    MR. MEE. Right. But it could be done. With the way film was

    made back then--there was pretty much one way of making film--if

    you matched the film speed, assuming you had access to the

    negative of each head shot you were using, you could match the

    film characteristics.

    MTG. So your position is that the things that they claimed to

    have observed through digital image processing in and of

    themselves cannot prove that these are authentic photographs?

    MR. MEE. No, I don't think that digital image processing alone

    can prove these photographs are authentic. With the technology

    that was available back then [in the late 1970s], I don't think

    they could have proven this. I don't know that it could be done

    today--possibly, with the scanning technology that's just

    coming out, you could do it. It would depend on how carefully

    the forger matched the film and on what steps he went through to

    fake the photographs.. There are a lot of variables.

    MTG. All right. Vanishing point analysis. I'm a layman, and

    when I read this, I got the impression that they didn't want to

    deal with the shadow angles themselves, so they resorted to

    this vanishing point analysis. They tried to explain all the

    shadow problems in the pictures--the neck, the nose and the eyes,

    the body shadows--with vanishing point analysis. Let me read

    this so we have some context here:

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Mr. McCamy, how did the panel

    address the question of the shadows in the

    backyard pictures?

    Mr. MCCAMY. This was addressed by a vanishing

    point analysis.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. What do you mean by "vanishing

    point analysis"?

    Mr. MCCAMY. The sun is very distant, so far away

    that we can consider it to be at infinity, and as

    a result, if we draw a line from an object to the

    shadow of the object, and we do this in a number

    of places in a scene, all of those lines are

    parallel lines.

    Now you may recall, if you have ever seen a

    photograph of railroad tracks disappearing into

    the distance, the photograph shows those two rails

    converging at a point. That is called the

    vanishing point. The rails are parallel but in

    the photograph they converge. This is taught in

    art courses in high school and in mechanical

    drawing, so the converging of parallel lines is a

    well-known matter of perspective. In a photograph

    one should expect that these parallel shadow lines

    should converge at the vanishing point. . . .

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes. Here we have 133-A and 133-B. A

    line is drawn from a part of this stairway, past

    the shadow of the stairway, down to here. A line

    is drawn from the butt of the pistol, through the

    shadow of the butt of the pistol, down to here,

    from the arm to the shadow of the arm, down to

    here. And when we do this for all the points in

    the photograph, we find that they all meet at a

    point, as they should.

    Now this is the line that passes through the nose

    and the chin down to here, and that one is the

    nose to the shadow of the nose. That is the one

    thing that has been disputed so frequently, and

    if you do the analysis properly, you see that the

    shadow lies right where it is supposed to lie.

    The same thing is true over here. Here we have the

    muzzle of the rifle, the shadow of the muzzle of

    the rifle, and so on down the line.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Mr. McCamy, if the lines were not

    parallel, would they all meet at one point as they

    do in these two exhibits?

    Mr. MCCAMY. No.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. If the lines in these two exhibits

    had not met at one point, what conclusion or

    inference might you have drawn?

    Mr. MCCAMY. We might have drawn the conclusion

    that something had been drawn in rather than

    traced in by the hand of nature.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Did you do a similar vanishing

    point analysis for 133-C?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes..

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. And what were the results?

    Mr. MCCAMY. The results were the same.

    Now, when you read on, however, it gets a little more

    interesting. McCamy was asked about the sharp angles of the

    lines in his analysis. I'll find it here. It jumped out at me

    as soon as I read it. [MTG looks through extract for a few

    seconds] Okay. Here it is. Let me read this. He [McCamy]

    was being questioned by Congressman Fithian, who was the only

    guy to ask any challenging questions. He [Fithian] said,

    This morning I was listening carefully when you

    described the vanishing point concept, which I

    find fascinating. But I wonder why did the

    vanishing point lines converge in such a very,

    very short distance on your chart.

    Now, I look at a railroad, even an artist's

    conception of a railroad track, or a road where it

    sort of narrows off. It gives me the impression

    that we are talking about, you know, great

    distances.

    Yet, there are some very, very sharp angles that

    those lines from the bush and the nose and the

    rest of it come in, all within 2 feet on your

    chart. Could you explain that optical problem

    that I am having?

    And here's McCamy's answer:

    Yes. The vanishing point may be at infinity; that

    is, if we have parallel vertical lines and the

    axis of the camera is horizontal. Then we do get

    parallel lines, and of course that says that the

    vanishing point is at infinity.

    Now, a very slight tilt of the camera will cause a

    convergence, but it would be a very slight

    convergence. It starts at infinity and it begins

    to move inward.

    Now, on the photographs that we saw here, the

    vanishing point of the shadows was substantially

    below the photographs. If photographs had been

    made later and later in that day, I have estimated

    that these pictures were taken about 4 to 4:30 in

    the afternoon--if pictures were made later, the

    vanishing point would have continued to move up

    until finally it would be within the picture area;

    that is, as the Sun had moved behind the

    photographer.

    In the instance that you cite of the railroad

    track disappearing into the distance, the

    vanishing point is in the picture, and you

    are seeing the vanishing point.

    I think that is as far as I can go in describing

    that phenomenon.. The vanishing point can be

    anywhere from at infinity to right in the picture

    itself.

    Now, I didn't quite understand exactly how McCamy explained the

    fact that the angles in his chart were so sharp and converged

    in such a short distance.

    MR. MEE. Well, not having looked at his chart, it's hard for

    me to comment on it. I'd have to look at it and see exactly what

    we're talking about. Those lines and sharp angles do sound odd,

    but I'd need to see the chart itself before I could really form

    an opinion here.

    But, really, I understand the principle of vanishing points,

    and I don't think it's relevant in this case. The real issue is

    the conflicts between the shadows. And, another thing, I can

    tell you that the sun that hit Oswald's face wasn't in a four

    o'clock position. You've also get to deal with the absence of

    shadow where there should be shadow. You've got to look at the

    shadows themselves--study their angles, determine the direction

    of your light source, those kinds of things.

    I mean, a vanishing point analysis is not about to explain

    why Oswald's nose shadow doesn't move or change form in the

    photographs. It's not going to explain why you seem to have

    two separate light sources hitting the body and the face. It's

    not going to explain those bulges [in the neck and the post].

    MTG. Okay. The disappearing chin. McCamy said that the

    edge of the chin disappeared in shadow. Now, the problem he

    was trying to explain is the fact that in the backyard photos

    the chin is broad and flat, but in all other pictures of Oswald--

    in all those that were taken from any kind of a frontal

    viewpoint--his chin is sharp and cleft.

    MR. MEE. It HAS disappeared in shadow, but not to the extent

    that Oswald's would have, and that's the difference.

    MTG. Okay. He [McCamy] was saying that Oswald's chin form

    vanished to the point that in the picture it looks like he has a

    broad, flat chin.

    MR. MEE. No, I would disagree with that. The sun was not in

    a position to have that much of an effect on the appearance of

    the chin.

    MTG. Uh-huh. Okay. Now, Mr. Fithian, bless his heart, he had

    a problem with this, too. Here's part of the exchange he had

    with McCamy:

    Mr. FITHIAN. Here is a thing that I had the

    greatest difficulty with in terms of my own

    viewing of the photographs, is the squareness of

    the chin.

    I wonder, Mr. Chairman, if we could ask that that

    multiple photograph, that chart with half a dozen

    Oswalds on it, plus the two, could be put back up.

    While we are doing this, let me preface my

    question by saying that sitting here and looking

    at your exhibit, I did not visually at least

    identify any other chin that was even

    approximately as square as the one in the backyard

    photograph--from all of the pictures that you put

    up.

    I could not see that. I hate to return to what you

    have already done. But it still puzzles me and

    troubles me. That seems to be one of the

    strongest points of the critics, is the misshape

    of the chin. I want to make sure I understood

    your testimony.

    It was your testimony that it was the light and

    shadow combination of an overhead Sun or whatever?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes.

    Mr. FITHIAN. Do I understand you correctly?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes.

    Then they went on for a bit, and then Fithian continued:

    Mr. FITHIAN. In the photo, in the two large

    blowups, the right-hand photo, is it your

    testimony, then, that the point of the chin, which

    obviously doesn't disappear--and I find it

    difficult to believe that just by changing your

    teeth or your mouth position it really makes that

    much difference--is it then that the point of the

    chin disappears in the shadow of the chin in

    layman's terms?

    Is that what you are saying happens in that

    photograph?

    Mr. MCCAMY. Yes, the lower part of the chin is not

    illuminated, so you don't see it. It just

    disappears in the shadow.

    MTG. Do you accept that?

    MR. MEE. Well, such a thing is possible, but not in this

    instance, because of the position of the sun.

    MTG. And that is what?

    MR. MEE. The position of the sun?

    MTG. Yeah.

    MR. MEE. Well, the sun is overhead and to his left.

    MTG. Based on the body shadows, you mean?

    MR. MEE. Yeah. The sunlight is coming down at him from about

    a four o'clock position. So I don't see how it could have made

    that much of his chin disappear. I mean, the underside of the

    chin is in shadow, but the edge hasn't vanished. The form [of

    the chin] is still there.

    MTG. What if the sun came from right around a twelve o'clock

    position?

    MR. MEE. Well, then you'd have to explain why both sides of the

    neck aren't in the same amount of shadow, and why the body shadow

    falls off to his right.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. I mean, if anything, it seems like there's more chin

    there, more than there should be, in terms of width, even if

    you ignore how flat it is.

    MTG. Yeah, I think so too.

    MR. MEE. That's how it looks to me. I would say the chin is a

    serious problem.

    MTG. Uh-huh. Okay. Now, I'd like to ask you about the

    fact that the panel found only very small variations in the

    distances between objects in the background of the pictures.

    Given the way that these photos were supposedly taken, does

    that seem possible?

    MR. MEE. No, the variations would be greater if these

    photographs were taken the way Marina said they were. I mean,

    like they showed in the video: She snaps a picture; Oswald walks

    over and takes the camera from her; he advances the film; he

    hands the camera back to her; he goes back over and assumes

    another pose; she aims with the camera again and then takes the

    picture; and they go through this process again for the third

    photo. No. . . . No way. The camera would have moved more than

    just a tiny fraction of an inch.

    Even with a professional photographer who's trying to hold the

    camera as still as possible, you're going to have more variations

    in distance than what they're talking about in these pictures.

    MTG. Now, Jack White mentioned that the small differences in

    distance could have been produced by keystoning. What do you

    think about that?

    MR. MEE. Oh, I think he's right. Now, when he was demonstrating

    the keystoning effect in the video, he was exaggerating a little

    bit to help you understand what he was talking about, but he's

    got the right idea. It would be a simple matter of tilting the

    easel just a little bit. I mean, any slight movement in the

    enlarger or the easel could cause the kinds of differences

    they're talking about here.

    MTG. Okay. Stereoscopic analysis. They said that when they

    analyzed these photos, they were able to view them

    stereoscopically. Let me just read some of what McCamy said:

    We were able to view these photographs

    stereoscopically, so we know that there was slight

    camera movement. We know that there were two

    pictures. But it has much more far reaching

    consequence than that.

    It tells us that there was a solid three

    dimensional field that was photographed two times.

    If one were to have photographed the background

    once, and then taken a camera and photographed

    that print and then rephotographed the print from

    two angles, when that is viewed stereoscopically,

    the human eye would tell you that you were looking

    at a plane print. That isn't what we saw. We saw

    depth, and we can still see depth.

    Now if one were going to do art work on actual

    stereo pairs, that art work has to be done

    exceedingly meticulously, because the slightest

    difference in the art work on one photograph and

    the art work on the other photograph would cause

    the points involved to appear to be too far away

    or too close. They would tend to float in space.

    So stereo viewing is an excellent way of checking

    up on the authenticity of the photograph.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Is any special viewer necessary to

    enable someone to see in stereo?

    Mr. MCCAMY. It is not necessary but it makes it

    more convenient for most people.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. How many panel members examined

    these photographs in stereo?

    Mr. MCCAMY. At least, oh, a half dozen.

    MTG. Any thoughts about that?

    MR. MEE. If you have slight movement during the enlarging

    process or during the copying process, I think you could get a

    different perspective in the photographs that would cause that

    effect. So, that doesn't prove. . . . It doesn't convincingly

    say that these pictures are authentic.

    I mean, I think we've all at one time looked through those little

    children's viewfinders and have seen those cartoon slides in

    3-D. The reason you get that is that you're looking through two

    different eyes and seeing the result of a slight movement of the

    prints. The prints of the cartoons have been slightly moved--the

    prints you're looking at through the viewfinder. You've got two

    prints, and they've been moved slightly, and that's what gives

    you your 3-D effect, the slight movement of those prints.

    So, in the case of these photographs. . . .

    MTG. The backyard photographs.

    MR. MEE. Right. In this case, if you had slight movement in

    the enlarger or during the copying process, you could get the

    right amount of difference between the photos so that you would

    be able to view them in stereo.

    MTG. Okay. One thing that I'd really like to ask you about

    has to do with the DeMohrenschildt photograph and the frame edge

    markings. Actually, it doesn't just involve the frame edge

    markings. It involves matching the DeMohrenschildt photo to the

    IR camera's film plane aperture. We talked about this briefly

    last time. Now, when Jack White testified before the Committee,

    the House Select Committee. . . .

    MR. MEE. Uh-huh.

    MTG. When he testified before the Committee, he said that. . . .

    [side one of the third tape runs out. Tape is flipped over, and

    the interview resumes.]

    MTG. Okay. Now, this involves the finding of the edge markings

    on the edges of the DeMohrenschildt photo and the determination

    that the photo is genuine because those markings are unique to

    the IR camera. Now, Jack White, when he testified back then,

    said. . . . Well, let me read what he said. [Reads from page

    205 of HIGH TREASON]

    The DeMohrenschildt picture shows a much larger

    amount of background around the edges than any of

    the photographs, 133-A, B, or C. To me, this

    indicates that the DeMohrenschildt picture is

    printed full negative. In fact, we can verify

    this because it is printed with a black border

    around the edge, the black border being the clear

    area around the edge of the negative.

    According to the FBI, the picture, CE-133-B, was

    identified as being taken with Oswald's camera

    because it could be matched to the film plane

    aperture. Yet, if the DeMohrenschildt picture

    shows a larger background area and it is taken

    from the same camera viewpoint, then 133-A, B, and

    C have been cropped and, therefore, if there is

    more background area in the picture, then it [the

    DeMohrenschildt photo] could not possibly be

    matched to the film plane aperture.

    Do you understand his point?

    MR. MEE. Yes.

    MTG. Can you explain it in layman's terms? Do you think he's

    right?

    MR. MEE. Well, there are certain things I'd have to know

    before I could say whether or not he's right. I'll put it this

    way: If the DeMohrenschildt photo has a lot more background than

    the B negative, and if both were taken from the same camera

    viewpoint, then, yes, that would tend to tell me that Mr. White

    is correct. What you'd have to do is make precise measurements

    of the DeMohrenschildt picture and the B negative, and then

    compare them. You'd also need to know if they were taken from

    the same camera viewpoint. You'd want a good, uncropped print of

    the B negative. These are the kinds of things I'd need to check

    out before I could really say anything about what he [White]

    says here.

    MTG. In his video, Jack White suggests that the DeMohrenschildt

    photo is a composite made up of 133-A and the border of the film

    plane aperture of the IR camera.

    MR. MEE. Can we see that segment again?

    MTG. Yeah.

    [Video segment is located on the tape and then replayed.]

    MR. MEE. No, that explanation. . . . I see what he's saying,

    but if you do that, you're going to have sort of a line of

    demarcation all the way around. This would be very easy to

    identify. Or, let's put it this way: It would be very difficult

    to cover up, extremely difficult to cover up, a line like that.

    It would be almost impossible to do that.

    MTG. Okay. Now to get back to the other point, about the fact

    that it's so much clearer than 133-A and. . . .

    MR.. MEE. It's an earlier generation than the ones that have

    been cropped..

    MTG. Right. Now how would they have gotten the two scratch

    marks onto it [the DeMohrenschildt photo]?

    MR. MEE. Well, this gets into how these pictures could have

    been made. I'll tell you what I think they might have done.

    [Mr. Mee starts to draw a diagram, using squares to represent

    pictures and/or negatives. As he presents his explanation, he

    points back and forth to the different squares. For instance,

    when he refers to "this one" or says "here," he points to a

    certain square, and then when he says something like "and then

    this one over here," he points to a different square, etc.,

    etc.]

    You see, what I'm thinking is that there was a group of backyard

    photographs made long before the DeMohrenschildt photograph, and

    that at some point in this earlier group you have composites.

    The first pictures, the very first ones, would be taken with a

    high-quality camera, a very high-quality camera. So your first

    pictures are all very high quality. Okay?

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. And then this group here would be taken from those

    pictures, again using a high-quality camera. Now the pictures

    in this group would be smaller than the first ones.

    And then, after that, just for example, way down the road,

    133-A, B, and C were taken from these. Okay? And every time

    along the way you're losing a generation.

    MTG. Uh-huh.

    MR. MEE. And, you never can tell, there may have been more then

    a couple generations in between these photos.

    Now, in the early stages, we're just talking about the

    background--one very high-quality picture of the backyard.

    So, then, you get down to here where you have your first pictures

    that include the figure holding the rifle and the newspapers.

    Okay?

    MTG. All right.

    MR. MEE. Now, there may have been more originals. You don't

    know how many could have existed before that.

    At this stage here, you introduce one or two heads, and you

    retouch those prints. Then, you photograph that print and

    you come up with a print and a negative here. And you do that

    for each picture. Now, these prints could be retouched, or the

    negatives could be retouched. Then, you'd make prints from those

    negatives.

    Now, you're down to here. This is where we introduce this stage,

    here. These photographs can either be the same or a generation

    or two down. Okay, then you've got these photos here--they've

    had the art work done on them and they've been reworked. Until

    now you're using a very high-quality camera. Then, you

    photograph one of these photos with the IR camera to make, for

    example, the DeMohrenschildt picture, which would give you the

    edge markings and the scratches.

    MTG. Now, what would happen if you were to analyze, say, the

    negative of this photo right here with digital image processing

    after all this stuff had been done?

    MR. MEE. Well, you've got to remember that you have these other

    pictures up here, where the heads are included. The grain

    pattern of this photo--the one that you're talking about--is

    going to be dependent on the film that has been used. If you

    have the negative of the photo of the head, then you know what

    kind of film to use.

    Let's say you saw that the film used for the head was, oh, 100-

    speed Kodak. That was a pretty common film back then, 100-speed.

    It might have even been less than that. Now, you would have to

    be sure, then, to use 100-speed Kodak to shoot the prints of the

    background and of the guy standing with the rifle and the

    newspapers. The key would be to keep your film consistent

    throughout. That would be very important. Now, if you did this,

    it would be extremely difficult, with the technology that they

    had during that time, to detect what little differences you

    would have with this process. We're talking about the late

    seventies?

    MTG. 1978 to 1979.

    MR. MEE. Right. I don't think they had the technology back then

    to be able to discern the small differences you'd have if you

    kept your film consistent. Today, possibly, with the

    sophistication of the computers and the scanning capabilities

    that they're just now coming out with, you might be able to spot

    the differences. But in the late seventies, I don't think they

    had the capability to detect them. As long as you maintained

    the consistency of the film for your photos, they'd all blend

    together. It's just like anything else. If your process is

    gradual enough, they're going to blend right in. This is how I

    think these photographs could have been made.

    MTG. Do you think there was only one forger?

    MR. MEE. No, I think you would have needed a team, a group of

    professionals.

    MTG. I'd like to show you a couple doctored prints that were

    released by Dallas authorities in 1992.

    [MTG shows Mr. Mee the two prints, both of which show a white

    human silhouette where Oswald is supposed to be. The whited-out

    figure corresponds closely in size and outline to the figure in

    the backyard photos.]

    MR. MEE. Is that right? Well, somebody was doing something.

    Now, this doesn't prove that this is how it was done. But these

    prints might represent an early attempt to produce the backyard

    photos. You never know.

    See, the thing is, though, I don't believe the pictures were

    made like this because you would have had too much area to

    retouch, even for a good retoucher. Here, in the head area, you

    would have only had a very small area to worry about. Mind you,

    these prints might have been a part of the process. It could

    have been done that way. But that's not how I would have done

    it.

    They [the forgers] probably looked at several different options

    for making these photographs, and they would have been looking

    for the best method. So these prints could have been one

    of the ways that they considered.

    MTG. All right. I'd like to ask you about varying exposure

    analysis.

    MR. MEE. Well, I understand what they were doing. The theory

    is that you're trying to. . . .

    MTG. Can I go ahead and read a little bit first?

    MR. MEE. Sure.

    MTG. Okay, I'm going to read some of what McCamy said about

    this.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. Please explain the results of this

    varying exposure analysis.

    Mr. MCCAMY.. Yes. In these illustrations, the

    greatest exposure gives the darkest print, and the

    least exposure, the lightest print. The advantage

    of doing this is that in the lightest areas of the

    picture we can see detail here that cannot be seen

    up here. Conversely, in the shadows, this is the

    best photograph on which to look for the detail.

    So that is a print ideally exposed to look into

    the shadows. This one is ideally exposed to look

    into the highlights, so we can see all the detail

    there.

    Mr. GOLDSMITH. After applying this method, did

    the panel discern anything unusual about these

    pictures?

    Mr. MCCAMY. No, nothing at all. There had been

    allegations that the shadows were painted in, and

    a simple examination of the shadows on these

    pictures shows that there is plenty of detail

    there. You can see grass, little stones. There

    is a newspaper lying back here. You can see the

    detail on it.

    Any comments?

    MR. MEE. I don't think it's an issue. I mean, I don't think the

    shadows were added. Now, I haven't had time to study these

    pictures long enough to give a firm opinion in this area. But,

    just from what I can see--again, without looking at the

    originals--I don't think the shadows were added.

    What he's talking about here is altering the exposure so

    you can see detail in the shadows. A black and white print has

    different grades from lightness to darkness. The full spectrum

    is called a zone system. The full spectrum is from 1 to 10--1

    being your whitest white, and 10 being your blackest black. Most

    cameras and film can only pick up a zone from about. . . . Well,

    let's say this is a sliding scale. Your camera might get a very

    white white, but it might not get a really dark dark, and it

    doesn't get everything in between. So, by altering the exposure,

    you can lighten these dark areas and see detail in them.

    Now that doesn't explain the problems of the different shadow

    angles and the bulges in the post and the neck.

    MTG. Right.

    MR. MEE. And I still have some questions about the shadow

    of the neck and the head in 133-A. It looks a little odd, but

    that might be due to using a different head. But the shadows of

    the bushes, the stairway, and all that--I don't see why a

    retoucher would have bothered with them. It would have been

    taking an unnecessary risk. So, really, I'd tend to agree with

    him [McCamy]. From what I can see, I don't think the shadows

    were added.

    MTG. Okay. . . .

    MR. MEE. Now, if he's saying that this analysis explains the

    shadow angles and those neck and post bulges, then I would

    disagree with him. You're not going to explain away those

    problems with that sort of analysis.

    MTG. It seems to me that the easiest way to explain the

    different body shadows would be to assume that they were

    photographed at different times of the day.

    MR. MEE. Yeah, I think they were just taken at different times

    of the day.

    You see, I understand what some of these guys [conspiracists] are

    saying. If you had a situation where you took a picture of the

    scene, and then took a picture of a person in a studio or

    somewhere else and then put the figure in the picture, then you'd

    need to add the shadows. But I agree with him [McCamy] here. I

    don't think the shadows were added. It would be a lot easier to

    just put a head on a body. I mean, you could put anybody in the

    picture. You could take the picture with the background and

    the body and everything, and then just take the head and put it

    on the figure. That would be a lot easier.

    MTG. Okay. I know we talked about this quite a bit last time,

    but I'd like to ask you again about the reenactment that McCamy

    cited to show that the nose shadow could remain the same even

    with the head tilted. I've already discussed this reenactment

    in detail in the forum [the JFK Assassination Forum on

    CompuServe]. I'd just like to get some of your views on it.

    MR. MEE. [begins shaking his head from side to side in the

    typical "No" motion.] Right. Well. . . . [pauses and

    continues to shake his head]

    MTG. Well, you know, even Congressman Fithian pointed out that

    the chances that all those things would occur at the same

    time were very low. [Fithian was referring to the manipulated

    and unrealistic head and camera movements that were done in the

    reenactment.]

    MR. MEE. Yeah. Well, let's put it this way: What they did

    wasn't realistic. The bottom line is that the [nose] shadow

    should have shifted when the head tilted. I mean, with the head

    tilted like that, you wouldn't have a drastic change, but you'd

    get enough movement that you could easily spot the difference.

    There's just no way that shadow should look like that.

    MTG. Okay. Let's see. . . . Let me see if I can find it

    here. Okay, here it is. What I have here is a picture. . . .

    [side two of the third tape runs out. The portion follows is

    reconstructed from notes taken by MTG. MTG showed Mr. Mee the

    notes at the conclusion of the interview, and Mr. Mee said

    they accurately reflected what he had said.]

    MTG. I'd like to show you a picture from Gerald Posner's book

    CASE CLOSED. The picture shows the grain structure analysis that

    was done on the right side of Oswald's face. Would you take a

    look at it and tell me what you think?

    [MTG shows Mr. Mee the bottom photo on the sixth page of pictures

    in Posner's book. Mr. Mee studies it for about a minute.]

    MR. MEE. I can see some variation in the grain pattern.

    However, I wouldn't form an opinion just from looking at a copy

    of a picture of this nature in a book. I would need to study the

    originals with a high-powered microscope so that I could see the

    grain structure. But, if the forger matched the film, and given

    the fact that for the most part there was one standard way

    of making film in the 60s, I wouldn't expect to see a big

    difference in the grain anyway. If the film was in fact

    matched, it would be difficult to reach a definite conclusion

    about the grain in terms of the authenticity of the backyard

    photos.

    MTG. When McCamy recognized that Mr. Scott's photograph was

    a fake, he did so because the shadows on the suit didn't match

    the shadows on the railing. McCamy explained:

    He [Mr. Scott, a fellow panel member] spent 40

    hours with an assistant preparing a fake

    photograph of a man standing in a backyard. When

    he presented the photograph, he mailed it to me, I

    pulled it out of the envelope, and as I pulled it

    out of the envelope I said it is a fake.

    I was rather surprised that it was that easy. As

    it turned out, what he had done was to make a

    photograph, a 6-foot photograph of a 6-foot man,

    and this was placed in the backyard, and it was

    photographed.

    But there was a thing that caught my eye

    instantly; that is, that there were shadows that

    were cast by parts of a dark suit. There were

    shadows cast by parts of a railing immediately

    behind the man.

    When the suit was in full sunlight, it exactly

    matched the railing. But the shadows on the suit

    didn't match the shadows on the railing.

    Now, that would not be the way it would have been

    if it had been a true photograph.

    When I read this, I thought it was strange that this was the same

    man who had just gone to such great lengths to dismiss the

    implications of the variant shadows in the backyard photos. Yet,

    he admitted that he concluded that Mr. Scott's picture was a fake

    because some of the shadows didn't match. What is your opinion

    on this matter?

    MR. MEE. McCamy was saying the same thing about Scott's photo

    that others have said about the backyard pictures. He was not

    consistent.

    Inconsistent shadows in a photo are a clear indication of fakery.

    McCamy was absolutely correct in immediately branding Mr. Scott's

    picture a fake based on the conflicting shadows, because we

    only have one sun. The shadow conflicts in the backyard

    photographs are at least, if not more, serious and telling. The

    head and the body were not photographed in the same sunlight.

    They were taken at two different times of the day.

    MTG. What do you think of the argument that a good forger would

    have done his pasting in a different part of the body, such as

    in the stomach or in the chest?

    MR. MEE. For one thing, in order to attach an upper body onto

    someone else's lower body in the stomach or chest area, you would

    have to match the shirt widths exactly. You would need to

    maintain consistency in any wrinkles or folds that came up to the

    joining point. You would have to ensure that the two persons'

    builds and figures were compatible. Also, the larger the object

    that your attaching, the harder it will be to hide the pasting.

    There is also the matter of the figure's pose. In order to

    attach Oswald's upper body onto a lower body, the forgers would

    have needed a picture of Oswald with his arms and hands in the

    necessary positions. They would have needed photos of him

    with his hands held in such a way that the rifle and the

    newspapers could have been inserted into them.

    Doing the pasting at the abdomen or lower would also present

    problems. The builds and figures would again have to be

    compatible. And you would be increasing the size of the

    object to be attached, thus making it even harder to hide

    the pasting.

    The chin area would be a logical place to do the joining, for

    a number of reasons. Most people have a natural cleft or

    indentation of some form in the chin, beneath the lower lip, and

    I notice that the line across Oswald's chin runs through this

    area. In joining only about 4/5 of a head onto a chin, the

    object to be attached would be small, much smaller than part or

    all of a man's upper body.

    The neck would be another place where the pasting could be done.

    The object to be attached would still be relatively small, at

    least when compared to an upper body. But, you would need to

    have necks that were identical in size and shape.

    MTG. Finally, what would you say in summary about the backyard

    photographs?

    MR. MEE. I am convinced they are fake. They show impossible

    shadows. The shadow conflicts are serious and telling. There is

    no way the backyard photos could have identical, or even nearly

    identical, backgrounds if they were taken in the manner described

    by Marina Oswald. The figure's chin is not Oswald's chin. This

    is readily apparent. Even if we were to accept the claim that

    the line across the chin was caused by a water spot, that would

    not change the fact that the chin itself is noticeably different

    from Oswald's chin. The neck bulge and the post indentation are

    further indications of tampering.

    MTG. I would like to thank you for coming here tonight and for

    taking so much of your time to answer my questions.

    MR. MEE. You're quite welcome, and it was my....pleasure..

    B...

  7. Subject:

    "The Men Who Killed Kennedy" ------------------

    The show was simply superb - one of the best done documentaries on the

    assassination I've seen in some time. It was actually done as the 6th in

    the Nigel Turner (BBC) series: 'The Men Who Killed Kennedy' and this was

    entitled (appropriately): 'The Truth Shall Set You Free'.

    The presentation opened with brief excerpts from Marina Oswald, and

    others - as to how the subsequent coverup has corrupted and undermined

    the country - giving rise to an ongoing and fundamental cynicism that is

    unrelenting.. Particular anger emanated from a Mr. Tannenbaum - who had

    been one of the counsels working with the House and Senate

    Assassinations Committee in 1978, and who had left when it became

    obvious the Committee was 'kowtowing' to the executive intelligence

    agencies (CIA, FBI) whom he referred to as resisting their requests for

    information every step of the way.

    There followed a series of vignettes - each featuring a person who -

    through their investigations, research, released information - have shed

    light on the dark corners of this event/

    The first was Tom Wilson - with 30 years experience using imaging and

    photonics techniques in the steel industry. He has now applied this

    techniques - along with computer enhancement - to examine again the

    Zapruder film. What was revealed - using high resolution pixel imaging

    and Fourier analysis - was nothing short of amazing. In the head shot

    frame - for example - one could actually see, with Wilson's techniques-

    the image of the bullet, inside JFK's skull and its *track* moving from

    the FRONT to the REAR of the skull. Undeniable high level, high quality

    evidence that the shot did indeed come from the front - as we have been

    maintaining all along. Showing the detailed iamgery, Wilson himself

    found his eyes welling with tears. One could sense his painful awareness

    of the lies and distortions we've been fed all these years, co-mingling

    with his frustration that up to now none of 'officialdom' has taken his

    work seriously or at least tried to replicate it.

    He also indicated that on going to Dealey Plaza and attempting to

    reconstruct the placement of all key people, etc. he could not get

    things to fit - with the motion of the bullet seen in his imagery.

    However, on further inspection - and on locating a storm sewer cover at

    the side of Elm St. - he found that the problem was solved and indeed

    the shot could only have been made from that location (the fatal head

    shot).

    This was confirmed by Jack Brazil and a military team he put together in

    1992, who found:

    a) a man could easily fit inside the storm sewer drain and have an openh

    view onto Elm St. and a good shot at the motorcade.

    B) the man could easily make his escape (in something like 20-23

    minutes) by following out the storm sewer to the Trinity River - making

    his way clear and free.

    The scenes tracing the sewer escape route were sobering indeed - and

    show that indeed, the killing could be carried out as a perfect crime,

    with the perpetrators getting away scott free.

    After the Brazil demo, Tom Wilson was seen again - now examining the

    autopsy photos with his techniques and comparing them with the

    photonic/pixel densities in the head of JFK as disclosed in the pristine

    Mary Moorman photo (aimed toward the GK, JFK's head visible from the

    rear).

    His imaging analysis showed where genuine human tissue was located in

    the autopsy film- by comparing it with pixel densities in the

    pre-autopsy condition (as exposed from the Moorman film). What was

    revealed was nothing less than startling: massive sections of 'fake'

    material covering nearly the entire rear of JFK's head (Wilson referred

    to it was Mortician's plaster). This same material was also used in the

    front of the head, to cover the entrance wound there..

    Wilson's fine work, and detailed analysis, showed also what many of us

    have been saying all along - that the autopsy photos are indeed fakes.

    Attention then shifted to Lt. Col. Dan Marvin, with 15 years experience

    as a paratrooper and eight combat campaigns. He has 21 awards and

    decorations and servied in the Elite Special Forces, the Green Berets.

    He had volunteered for Special Forces Guerilla Training at Fort Bragg,

    NC only several weeks after the assassination. He noted also that nearly

    all the instruction techniques at the 'Guerrila Warfare School' was

    classified. The most secret of all - conducted within an enclosed and

    wire fence perimeter - was that dealing with terrorism and

    assassinations.

    His instructors in this phase noted how the JFK assassination was "a

    classic example of the way to organize a program to eliminate a head of

    state while 'pointing the finger' at a lone assassin" (His words). He

    noted that this also included a mock layout of Dealey Plaza indicating

    where all the shooters were located. He indicated that he and other

    trainees had also been told point blank that 'Oswald was not involved-

    he was set up'. He also recalled the remark in passing of one of the CIA

    instructors to another : "Things really did go well in Dealey Plaza that

    day, didn't they?"

    Marvin's segment ended by recalling how in 1965 he was asked to kill a

    Naval person in the States- a William Bruce Pitzer. He refused, of

    course, but suspects that someone else he knew took the job. Not long

    thereafter- Pitzer (who was a Visual Aids officer at Bethesda - and had

    the actual film footage of the autopsy) was found dead with a .38 in his

    right hand and a gunshot wound to the head. (A later climp interviews

    Pitzer's Petty Officer assistant who noted that this was odd since

    Pitzer had always been left-handed, and indeed had been kidded in card

    games for 'dealing the wrong way around'.)

    The presentation concludes by interviewing two other researchers who

    have - based on released documents- shown how the original assassination

    plots directed at Castro, were re-directed at JFK in something called

    'Operation Freedom'. They even have documented evidence that RFK called

    one of the leaders of this group and said to his 'you did this to my

    brother.'

    Daeron

    Link long gone...

    *******************

    See.....

    The Basics of Photogrammetry

    http://www.geodetic.com/whatis.htm

    The Men Who Killed Kennedy - Part 6 - 1 of 5

    10:02 -

    Part 6: 1 of 5 "The Truth Shall Make You Free"

    http://www.maryferrell.org/wiki/index.php/..._Killed_Kennedy

    B..

  8. "Fair Play" (Richard Bartholemew), in the middle of

    review of "Assassination Science":

    I would be remiss if I did not mention another oversight by Fetzer: his

    complete omission of the digital photographic

    photometry experiments of former U.S. Steel scientist

    Tom Wilson. Those experiments, completed and presented

    years earlier, but never published, reached many of the

    same conclusions as Fetzer's contributors (Harrison E.

    Livingstone, High Treason 2, [New York: Carroll & Graf,

    1992], pp. 338-39).

    I saw both of Wilson's initial public presentations.

    The first was at the Assassination Symposium on John F.

    Kennedy (ASK) in Dallas in 1991. It was a presentation

    involving charts of mathematical calculations and color

    slides of computer-processed images.

    That debut of Wilson's work was videotaped by South by

    Southwest, the conference organizers, but the quality

    of the presentation and the video was compromised by a

    loud party in the next-door ballroom. The two ballrooms

    were separated by a non-soundproof, movable partition.

    In what is at best an amazing coincidence, that party

    was part of a reunion of U.S. Secret Service agents,

    some of whom had served on Kennedy's Dallas trip. That

    was learned about three years later by Vince Palamara

    while interviewing some of those former agents.

    http://www.acorn.net/jfkplace/03/VP/0052-VP.TXT

    ****************************************************

    Testimony of Thomas Wilson

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Dallas, Texas -- November 18, 1994 Hearing

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    MR. MARWELL: Mr. Thomas Wilson, please.

    MR. WILSON: First, I would like to thank the Board for allowing me to come here and make my presentation to you. I am a private citizen, an American citizen, and that is what dictated that I be here today. I have a business which is consulting with image processing, with computer analysis. I am also qualified in Federal Court as an expert in the flow of material as related to entrance and exit wounds in a cadaver from images. I have worked on several cases involving a murder trial, civil suit, and so forth. My findings have resulted in the exhumation of a cadaver to prove that the data was real and verifiable. The cadaver was exhumed, and it was verifiable.

    The thing that I would like to present to the Board today, and I do not mean to demean any agency, that is not my task, but this is the real world. I have worked for many large corporations, sometimes the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing, and I would just like to briefly go through my attempts to get articles from the Archives.

    In 1991, I visited the Archives and looked at some of the material. I asked for a request for authenticity on several things, and I will just go through a few articles here. On July 2nd, 1991, I wrote to the National Archives and Records Administration. After conferring with people there, and during my visit to the Archives in June, I viewed two three-quarter inch beta films that were the Zapruder, Nix and Muchmore films. During my viewing, I requested an established authenticity of where these films came from, where they were copied, who copied them, and the process in which they were copied.

    In July 1991, I received a letter from the Archives, and if the Board desires I can have this copied and sent to you at some date: In reply to your letter of July 2nd, we are unable to answer completely all of the questions you posed for us concerning the administrative history and handling of the originals and various copies.

    It goes on and it discusses the three-quarter inch copies: This copy of the Zapruder film was received as part of the files of the 1978 House Assassination Committee. It is a 16 millimeter enhanced color copy.

    Now I have to tell you, I just hate the word "enhanced" because enhanced means that somebody has changed something for the human eye, and the human eye just is not good enough to present evidence in a murder case. So here we have enhanced things being used as evidence for the Warren Commission, for the House Assassination Committee, and these people are trying to make an honest determination based on a false image.

    So they said in their other holdings they have the original 8 millimeter film held as a courtesy and so forth, and so on.

    The final paragraph says: You must realize that while we can trace the providence and our continuous possession of these materials since they arrived in our custody, we cannot after these many years provide names, dates, types of equipment, or copying processes. Well, these are the images of the assassination of our President. This boggles my mind.

    On May 8, 1992, I sent a request in. I have a request under the Freedom of Information Act. FBI photography expert Lyndal Shaneyfelt to examine the photograph Exhibits 133-A and 133-B. My request is for information on the photograph of a person, head removed from the photograph, holding the rifle and simulating the pose in Exhibit 133-A. I asked for a copy of the photograph, name of the person holding the rifle, the title of the person taking the photograph, the type of camera, the film used, the department that developed it. The exact location where the photograph was taken with a reference to north, south, east and west.

    The reason that I asked this is I have analyzed the so-called "Lee Harvey Oswald backyard photograph" and have been able to establish the time of day that that photograph was taken through various means, and there is a little -- getting that information.

    But the interesting part about it is that the FBI reenactment has several qualities within that reenactment that are also in the Lee Harvey Oswald backyard photograph, and this should definitely be explored because there are photographic image anomalies present in both. That was in May 8th, 1992.

    The National Archives wrote me back on May 26th. They were very responsive. I thought, oh, boy, this is it. Here is what they said: This is in response to your letter, a Freedom of Information Act about the assassination, we can provide a photographic print of the Commission Exhibit that you specified at a cost of $6.25. Very efficient, it got me exactly what I wanted.

    This is the photograph that I am referring to. Now comes the Catch-22. I wrote to the Director of FBI on June 5th, 1992. I said: Gentlemen, I have a request under the Freedom of Information Act. I talked about Mr. Shaneyfelt's analyses. As far as I can tell, and I have his deposition, this is the one gentleman who did the best he could to analyze the information that he had and determine the shots and so forth, and the fake or not fake photographs.

    I asked the same questions of the FBI. On August 22nd, 1992, I got a letter back. This is in reference to your request -- this is astounding to me, and I think the Board should certainly look into this matter -- efforts were made by FOIA personnel who are familiar with the JFK assassination documents and they have been unsuccessful in locating the photograph, the one I just showed you. The FBI does not have the personnel resources available to conduct the research necessary to locate the photograph you described. The records we currently have processed under the provisions of FOIA are 202,134 pages. If you would please enclose a check for $20,203.40, we will send this information to you.

    Now honest researchers trying to get information, and I have worked for some big companies, believe me, I can see what happened. Well, I didn't have the $20,000 or I think I would have sent it just to see what happened.

    Okay, so then I wrote to the Director of FBI on June 5th, 1992, and I asked them -- I told them where I found the Shaneyfelt exhibit. I told them they could have it in file so-and-so for $6.52. I wasn't being facetious. I was trying to make a point that I am desperate for evidence. No reply.

    Then in January 8th, 1993, I wrote a letter to Mr. O'Brien, at the FBI -- Chief of the FOI Section, excuse me, and the purpose of the letter is to inquire into the status of my request that I just mentioned. So months have gone by. I would like to take this opportunity to again request your assistance on Item H since Mr. Shaneyfelt did the analysis on the Oswald backyard photograph and the rifle, your Department must have a file under his name. I am only interested in the FBI files containing his analyses, techniques, data and testimony on the photograph and the rifle.

    I got a letter back saying that there are 84 pages of documents they will send me at no charge because someone else had asked this first and they had it. So I get the impression that the only reason I got 84 pages is because I am number two. If were number one, I would not have gotten this. And this was free of charge, including transportation.

    So I am starting to wonder, I realize our government is trying to help, but this is getting to be a little bit ridiculous. They also sent an explanation of the exemptions, and there are many exemptions. One of the exemptions is listed, in the interest of national defense, and would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations.

    In August of 1993 I got another letter saying that they are sending me the 16 photographs, but I never really got the data. That brings me up-to-date with why I am really here.

    First off, I feel that it is absolutely necessary for me to see the analyses by the FBI of the photographs that they have in question on this assassination. I feel that it is absolutely necessary for me to go into the Archives and look at the autopsy photos. I have a request in to Mr. Burke Marshall for eight months, and I don't want to embarrass Mr. Burke Marshall but he got back to me recently and he right now is looking into the possibility of letting me go into the Archives to look at the autopsy photographs.

    If the information contained in the FBI analyses is security-wise, then I would ask for a security clearance as a United States citizen to look at this material, because what has happened is, for the first five years of looking into this situation, and I was drawn into this completely by accident -- I am not a research buff, I am an engineer. I work with the facts, I don't have a theory. Since the 25th anniversary I have found out several things.

    For instance, Mr. Mack was talking about the Mary Moorman photo. I can verify absolutely with hard scientific data that there is a shooter up there on the Knoll, no question about it. Mr. Mack and Mr. White are the fathers of that finding and I will verify that.

    But in the last years, when I tried to bring this to the public's attention, I decided, you know, you can go and you can prove that Mr. Oswald did this, he didn't do this, all these theories, I am going to concentrate on one thing, the head wound. That is all I am going to talk about, and I want to tell you what I have and what I would like to do about giving this evidence up.

    I have chain of evidence photographs that were held by private citizens since their inception. They have been signed and dated. Everyone that has touched these photographs is a part of the chain of evidence. This chain of evidence brings out three things that I am going to bring to the State of Texas because Mr. Kennedy, our President, was murdered in Texas. Lee Harvey Oswald was here in Texas. Lee Harvey Oswald was arraigned for the murder of the President. As I understand, now I have never seen an official document, but I have certainly read a lot, he was arraigned for murder in Texas.

    Now I am going to bring hard scientific proof, chain of evidence photographs, data of everything I have done, all of the protocol that I have used which can be reproduced by any agency of the government anywhere, and I am going to bring that in the next few months. It is going to prove three things positively.

    Number one, Lee Harvey Oswald did not fire the shot that hit President Kennedy in the head. If the shot that hit President Kennedy in the head is the fatal shot, then there is a still a murderer on the loose.

    I am going to prove the direction that the missile came into his head, and the damage that was done within the head from these images as chain of evidence, and I am going to prove what happened to the missile when it struck President in the right front forehead.

    Now, there are three things that I would please request the Board to do. Number one, these documents are in various places, so if something happens to Tom Wilson I want to assure you that this will go forward, and I am not joking.

    Number two, I want to let you know that when this evidence is brought forth in Dallas, and there are some people that are going to make the arrangements for me, I would offer the Board, any government agency, to participate in this, and I would particularly like you to take my message back to the Senators from my State, Senator Specter, Senator Wolford and Rick Santorum who is going to be the next Senator. I can't speak for Marina Porter, Marina Oswald Porter, but I want to tell you that this woman had the right to know did her husband or did her husband not fire the fatal shot. I don't know anything else about Mr. Oswald, so I am going to request that she get in touch with her Senator from Texas, and when this evidence is submitted it will all be done in a public forum.

    If there is anything I can help you, the Board Members, or anything between now and when this is submitted, I will be very happy to do so, but I have the proof, I have it documented, it can be verified, and it is not a theory.

    CHAIRMAN TUNHEIM: Thank you, Mr. Wilson.

    Questions?

    DR. HALL: Yes, I have a question. What is the status of your FOIA request now?

    MR. WILSON: As of right now, I have not gotten anything from the FBI about seeing Mr. Shaneyfelt's files. I even telephoned down there. They were very cooperative, don't misunderstand me, but I said, is Mr. Shaneyfelt still alive, because you know we are all getting gray hair, we are going over the hill here, but I said I can even have an interview with him. I really want to see -- I have to say to you that after 30 years of working with this, working on everything in the industrial to tremendous forensic work, the things that I see in his analysis, I don't follow him, but that was 30 years ago, and it is wrong, it is flawed, and they will not let me have access to that file. I have it on appeal.

    DR. HALL: What I think would be very helpful to us is if you could provide us a list of the FOIA requests you have made and the status of those requests as you understand them at the moment, including, of course, to whom they were directed.

    MR. WILSON: Okay. Should I send it to the same address that I sent my initial letter?

    DR. HALL: Dr. Marwell will do the job for you.

    MR. WILSON: I will do that when I get back home shortly.

    DR. NELSON: I would like to add, Mr. Wilson, that our statute does not have the same exemptions as Freedom of Information Act. It has more exemptions than our statute does. You might want to compare the two of them when you start looking for exemptions, or postponement in this case.

    MR. WILSON: How do I get a copy of this?

    DR. NELSON: It should be in any library that has government documents. Mr. Marwell can provide you with that.

    MR. WILSON: If you would send it to me, I would appreciate it, yes.

    DR. NELSON: That is a difference in what will be postponed. There is a difference between being exempt, being totally exempted and postponed also. Under our statute we postpone.

    MR. WILSON: I realize that your task here also was to locate these images, okay, and rightfully so, but you understand these images cannot be given up until they have been presented as a chain of evidence in a murder trial, but believe me they are all documented and verifiable.

    CHAIRMAN TUNHEIM: We will look forward to that.

    MR. MARWELL: These images that you described, have they been seen by anyone else?

    MR. WILSON: They have been seen by the person that owns them, and they have been by Dr. Sillwyck.

    MR. MARWELL: But they are previously unknown to the general public?

    MR. WILSON: Let's say this, they are all known. All these photographs are nothing that hasn't been available through whatever, but these are chain of evidence photographs.

    See in the House Committee, when they had the X-rays enhanced for the Assassination Committee, I have a copy of the frontal X-ray and I can see the terminology down there, and immediately I know how this X-ray was -- I will use the word "enhanced." Believe me, you don't ever want to use enhanced in this type of thing. I can see where they have done -- and I am not bringing in the technical jargon -- but they have done things to average data and when you average data you don't have the right thing. So I would like to see the 1978 House Committee, how are they going to analyze it? I understand they hired private firms. If this is really -- I can't believe that what I am doing now, and I am sure I am up to the government's status here as far as technology, maybe a little bit ahead. I just came from Comdex where Norgate has talked about some things in the future that I have done in the past couple of years.

    But if I could get to see how the House Committee analyzed those X-rays, if it is detrimental to our country, I would go for a secret clearance, and I would not divulge it, but I have to see it. I cannot rest until I see this.

    MR. MARWELL: Could you just give us an idea of what you mean by chain of evidence?

    MR. WILSON: Yes. In any trial, if you have a piece of evidence, let's say I got shot, and this is my coat and I have a hole in it. Well, if somebody takes this coat, they put it in a bag and they sign, I received this coat, so forth and so on, and date it and sign it. Now forensics wants to look at this hole and see where the hole came in or out, so they take this coat and they give it to John Smith. John Smith signs it and dates it, so that everywhere that here this piece of evidence has been, it knows exactly who had it and when they had it and where they had it.

    These photographs have never left the chain of evidence, and I must say that these photographs have been shown throughout the world for 30 years, everybody has looked at them, and they never saw what is in them. Our eyes just aren't good enough.

    CHAIRMAN TUNHEIM: Thank you, Mr. Wilson.

    http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/arrb/index68.htm

    All Witnesses Before the AARB.

    http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/arrb/index.htm#index

    *********************

    On the TMWKK video.....Mr.Wison also shows his research........he analysed what he had found on his first trip to Dealey..

    He went back a second time, as his findings showed him that a shot on a upward angle, trajectory had hit the President

    in the head...

    He redid his studies, and obtaiined the same results...

    B......

  9. "Fair Play" (Richard Bartholemew), in the middle of

    review of "Assassination Science":

    I would be remiss if I did not mention another oversight by Fetzer: his

    complete omission of the digital photographic

    photometry experiments of former U.S. Steel scientist

    Tom Wilson. Those experiments, completed and presented

    years earlier, but never published, reached many of the

    same conclusions as Fetzer's contributors (Harrison E.

    Livingstone, High Treason 2, [New York: Carroll & Graf,

    1992], pp. 338-39).

    I saw both of Wilson's initial public presentations.

    The first was at the Assassination Symposium on John F.

    Kennedy (ASK) in Dallas in 1991. It was a presentation

    involving charts of mathematical calculations and color

    slides of computer-processed images.

    That debut of Wilson's work was videotaped by South by

    Southwest, the conference organizers, but the quality

    of the presentation and the video was compromised by a

    loud party in the next-door ballroom. The two ballrooms

    were separated by a non-soundproof, movable partition.

    In what is at best an amazing coincidence, that party

    was part of a reunion of U.S. Secret Service agents,

    some of whom had served on Kennedy's Dallas trip. That

    was learned about three years later by Vince Palamara

    while interviewing some of those former agents.

    http://www.acorn.net/jfkplace/03/VP/0052-VP.TXT

    ****************************************************

    Testimony of Thomas Wilson

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Dallas, Texas -- November 18, 1994 Hearing

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    MR. MARWELL: Mr. Thomas Wilson, please.

    MR. WILSON: First, I would like to thank the Board for allowing me to come here and make my presentation to you. I am a private citizen, an American citizen, and that is what dictated that I be here today. I have a business which is consulting with image processing, with computer analysis. I am also qualified in Federal Court as an expert in the flow of material as related to entrance and exit wounds in a cadaver from images. I have worked on several cases involving a murder trial, civil suit, and so forth. My findings have resulted in the exhumation of a cadaver to prove that the data was real and verifiable. The cadaver was exhumed, and it was verifiable.

    The thing that I would like to present to the Board today, and I do not mean to demean any agency, that is not my task, but this is the real world. I have worked for many large corporations, sometimes the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing, and I would just like to briefly go through my attempts to get articles from the Archives.

    In 1991, I visited the Archives and looked at some of the material. I asked for a request for authenticity on several things, and I will just go through a few articles here. On July 2nd, 1991, I wrote to the National Archives and Records Administration. After conferring with people there, and during my visit to the Archives in June, I viewed two three-quarter inch beta films that were the Zapruder, Nix and Muchmore films. During my viewing, I requested an established authenticity of where these films came from, where they were copied, who copied them, and the process in which they were copied.

    In July 1991, I received a letter from the Archives, and if the Board desires I can have this copied and sent to you at some date: In reply to your letter of July 2nd, we are unable to answer completely all of the questions you posed for us concerning the administrative history and handling of the originals and various copies.

    It goes on and it discusses the three-quarter inch copies: This copy of the Zapruder film was received as part of the files of the 1978 House Assassination Committee. It is a 16 millimeter enhanced color copy.

    Now I have to tell you, I just hate the word "enhanced" because enhanced means that somebody has changed something for the human eye, and the human eye just is not good enough to present evidence in a murder case. So here we have enhanced things being used as evidence for the Warren Commission, for the House Assassination Committee, and these people are trying to make an honest determination based on a false image.

    So they said in their other holdings they have the original 8 millimeter film held as a courtesy and so forth, and so on.

    The final paragraph says: You must realize that while we can trace the providence and our continuous possession of these materials since they arrived in our custody, we cannot after these many years provide names, dates, types of equipment, or copying processes. Well, these are the images of the assassination of our President. This boggles my mind.

    On May 8, 1992, I sent a request in. I have a request under the Freedom of Information Act. FBI photography expert Lyndal Shaneyfelt to examine the photograph Exhibits 133-A and 133-B. My request is for information on the photograph of a person, head removed from the photograph, holding the rifle and simulating the pose in Exhibit 133-A. I asked for a copy of the photograph, name of the person holding the rifle, the title of the person taking the photograph, the type of camera, the film used, the department that developed it. The exact location where the photograph was taken with a reference to north, south, east and west.

    The reason that I asked this is I have analyzed the so-called "Lee Harvey Oswald backyard photograph" and have been able to establish the time of day that that photograph was taken through various means, and there is a little -- getting that information.

    But the interesting part about it is that the FBI reenactment has several qualities within that reenactment that are also in the Lee Harvey Oswald backyard photograph, and this should definitely be explored because there are photographic image anomalies present in both. That was in May 8th, 1992.

    The National Archives wrote me back on May 26th. They were very responsive. I thought, oh, boy, this is it. Here is what they said: This is in response to your letter, a Freedom of Information Act about the assassination, we can provide a photographic print of the Commission Exhibit that you specified at a cost of $6.25. Very efficient, it got me exactly what I wanted.

    This is the photograph that I am referring to. Now comes the Catch-22. I wrote to the Director of FBI on June 5th, 1992. I said: Gentlemen, I have a request under the Freedom of Information Act. I talked about Mr. Shaneyfelt's analyses. As far as I can tell, and I have his deposition, this is the one gentleman who did the best he could to analyze the information that he had and determine the shots and so forth, and the fake or not fake photographs.

    I asked the same questions of the FBI. On August 22nd, 1992, I got a letter back. This is in reference to your request -- this is astounding to me, and I think the Board should certainly look into this matter -- efforts were made by FOIA personnel who are familiar with the JFK assassination documents and they have been unsuccessful in locating the photograph, the one I just showed you. The FBI does not have the personnel resources available to conduct the research necessary to locate the photograph you described. The records we currently have processed under the provisions of FOIA are 202,134 pages. If you would please enclose a check for $20,203.40, we will send this information to you.

    Now honest researchers trying to get information, and I have worked for some big companies, believe me, I can see what happened. Well, I didn't have the $20,000 or I think I would have sent it just to see what happened.

    Okay, so then I wrote to the Director of FBI on June 5th, 1992, and I asked them -- I told them where I found the Shaneyfelt exhibit. I told them they could have it in file so-and-so for $6.52. I wasn't being facetious. I was trying to make a point that I am desperate for evidence. No reply.

    Then in January 8th, 1993, I wrote a letter to Mr. O'Brien, at the FBI -- Chief of the FOI Section, excuse me, and the purpose of the letter is to inquire into the status of my request that I just mentioned. So months have gone by. I would like to take this opportunity to again request your assistance on Item H since Mr. Shaneyfelt did the analysis on the Oswald backyard photograph and the rifle, your Department must have a file under his name. I am only interested in the FBI files containing his analyses, techniques, data and testimony on the photograph and the rifle.

    I got a letter back saying that there are 84 pages of documents they will send me at no charge because someone else had asked this first and they had it. So I get the impression that the only reason I got 84 pages is because I am number two. If were number one, I would not have gotten this. And this was free of charge, including transportation.

    So I am starting to wonder, I realize our government is trying to help, but this is getting to be a little bit ridiculous. They also sent an explanation of the exemptions, and there are many exemptions. One of the exemptions is listed, in the interest of national defense, and would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations.

    In August of 1993 I got another letter saying that they are sending me the 16 photographs, but I never really got the data. That brings me up-to-date with why I am really here.

    First off, I feel that it is absolutely necessary for me to see the analyses by the FBI of the photographs that they have in question on this assassination. I feel that it is absolutely necessary for me to go into the Archives and look at the autopsy photos. I have a request in to Mr. Burke Marshall for eight months, and I don't want to embarrass Mr. Burke Marshall but he got back to me recently and he right now is looking into the possibility of letting me go into the Archives to look at the autopsy photographs.

    If the information contained in the FBI analyses is security-wise, then I would ask for a security clearance as a United States citizen to look at this material, because what has happened is, for the first five years of looking into this situation, and I was drawn into this completely by accident -- I am not a research buff, I am an engineer. I work with the facts, I don't have a theory. Since the 25th anniversary I have found out several things.

    For instance, Mr. Mack was talking about the Mary Moorman photo. I can verify absolutely with hard scientific data that there is a shooter up there on the Knoll, no question about it. Mr. Mack and Mr. White are the fathers of that finding and I will verify that.

    But in the last years, when I tried to bring this to the public's attention, I decided, you know, you can go and you can prove that Mr. Oswald did this, he didn't do this, all these theories, I am going to concentrate on one thing, the head wound. That is all I am going to talk about, and I want to tell you what I have and what I would like to do about giving this evidence up.

    I have chain of evidence photographs that were held by private citizens since their inception. They have been signed and dated. Everyone that has touched these photographs is a part of the chain of evidence. This chain of evidence brings out three things that I am going to bring to the State of Texas because Mr. Kennedy, our President, was murdered in Texas. Lee Harvey Oswald was here in Texas. Lee Harvey Oswald was arraigned for the murder of the President. As I understand, now I have never seen an official document, but I have certainly read a lot, he was arraigned for murder in Texas.

    Now I am going to bring hard scientific proof, chain of evidence photographs, data of everything I have done, all of the protocol that I have used which can be reproduced by any agency of the government anywhere, and I am going to bring that in the next few months. It is going to prove three things positively.

    Number one, Lee Harvey Oswald did not fire the shot that hit President Kennedy in the head. If the shot that hit President Kennedy in the head is the fatal shot, then there is a still a murderer on the loose.

    I am going to prove the direction that the missile came into his head, and the damage that was done within the head from these images as chain of evidence, and I am going to prove what happened to the missile when it struck President in the right front forehead.

    Now, there are three things that I would please request the Board to do. Number one, these documents are in various places, so if something happens to Tom Wilson I want to assure you that this will go forward, and I am not joking.

    Number two, I want to let you know that when this evidence is brought forth in Dallas, and there are some people that are going to make the arrangements for me, I would offer the Board, any government agency, to participate in this, and I would particularly like you to take my message back to the Senators from my State, Senator Specter, Senator Wolford and Rick Santorum who is going to be the next Senator. I can't speak for Marina Porter, Marina Oswald Porter, but I want to tell you that this woman had the right to know did her husband or did her husband not fire the fatal shot. I don't know anything else about Mr. Oswald, so I am going to request that she get in touch with her Senator from Texas, and when this evidence is submitted it will all be done in a public forum.

    If there is anything I can help you, the Board Members, or anything between now and when this is submitted, I will be very happy to do so, but I have the proof, I have it documented, it can be verified, and it is not a theory.

    CHAIRMAN TUNHEIM: Thank you, Mr. Wilson.

    Questions?

    DR. HALL: Yes, I have a question. What is the status of your FOIA request now?

    MR. WILSON: As of right now, I have not gotten anything from the FBI about seeing Mr. Shaneyfelt's files. I even telephoned down there. They were very cooperative, don't misunderstand me, but I said, is Mr. Shaneyfelt still alive, because you know we are all getting gray hair, we are going over the hill here, but I said I can even have an interview with him. I really want to see -- I have to say to you that after 30 years of working with this, working on everything in the industrial to tremendous forensic work, the things that I see in his analysis, I don't follow him, but that was 30 years ago, and it is wrong, it is flawed, and they will not let me have access to that file. I have it on appeal.

    DR. HALL: What I think would be very helpful to us is if you could provide us a list of the FOIA requests you have made and the status of those requests as you understand them at the moment, including, of course, to whom they were directed.

    MR. WILSON: Okay. Should I send it to the same address that I sent my initial letter?

    DR. HALL: Dr. Marwell will do the job for you.

    MR. WILSON: I will do that when I get back home shortly.

    DR. NELSON: I would like to add, Mr. Wilson, that our statute does not have the same exemptions as Freedom of Information Act. It has more exemptions than our statute does. You might want to compare the two of them when you start looking for exemptions, or postponement in this case.

    MR. WILSON: How do I get a copy of this?

    DR. NELSON: It should be in any library that has government documents. Mr. Marwell can provide you with that.

    MR. WILSON: If you would send it to me, I would appreciate it, yes.

    DR. NELSON: That is a difference in what will be postponed. There is a difference between being exempt, being totally exempted and postponed also. Under our statute we postpone.

    MR. WILSON: I realize that your task here also was to locate these images, okay, and rightfully so, but you understand these images cannot be given up until they have been presented as a chain of evidence in a murder trial, but believe me they are all documented and verifiable.

    CHAIRMAN TUNHEIM: We will look forward to that.

    MR. MARWELL: These images that you described, have they been seen by anyone else?

    MR. WILSON: They have been seen by the person that owns them, and they have been by Dr. Sillwyck.

    MR. MARWELL: But they are previously unknown to the general public?

    MR. WILSON: Let's say this, they are all known. All these photographs are nothing that hasn't been available through whatever, but these are chain of evidence photographs.

    See in the House Committee, when they had the X-rays enhanced for the Assassination Committee, I have a copy of the frontal X-ray and I can see the terminology down there, and immediately I know how this X-ray was -- I will use the word "enhanced." Believe me, you don't ever want to use enhanced in this type of thing. I can see where they have done -- and I am not bringing in the technical jargon -- but they have done things to average data and when you average data you don't have the right thing. So I would like to see the 1978 House Committee, how are they going to analyze it? I understand they hired private firms. If this is really -- I can't believe that what I am doing now, and I am sure I am up to the government's status here as far as technology, maybe a little bit ahead. I just came from Comdex where Norgate has talked about some things in the future that I have done in the past couple of years.

    But if I could get to see how the House Committee analyzed those X-rays, if it is detrimental to our country, I would go for a secret clearance, and I would not divulge it, but I have to see it. I cannot rest until I see this.

    MR. MARWELL: Could you just give us an idea of what you mean by chain of evidence?

    MR. WILSON: Yes. In any trial, if you have a piece of evidence, let's say I got shot, and this is my coat and I have a hole in it. Well, if somebody takes this coat, they put it in a bag and they sign, I received this coat, so forth and so on, and date it and sign it. Now forensics wants to look at this hole and see where the hole came in or out, so they take this coat and they give it to John Smith. John Smith signs it and dates it, so that everywhere that here this piece of evidence has been, it knows exactly who had it and when they had it and where they had it.

    These photographs have never left the chain of evidence, and I must say that these photographs have been shown throughout the world for 30 years, everybody has looked at them, and they never saw what is in them. Our eyes just aren't good enough.

    CHAIRMAN TUNHEIM: Thank you, Mr. Wilson.

    http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/arrb/index68.htm

    All Witnesses Before the AARB.

    http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/arrb/index.htm#index

    *********************

    On the TMWKK video.....Mr.Wison also shows his research........he analysed what he had found on his first trip to Dealey..

    He went back a second time, as his findings showed him that a shot on a upward angle, trajectory had hit the President

    in the head...

    He redid his studies, and obtaiined the same results...

    B......

  10. The quality of the National Archives' photographic copy of this hand written report is so poor that many of its words cannot be made out in a scanned copy. Consequently, we have provided below a typed copy ]

    CD - 87 Folder 1

    CO2 34030 11/22

    9:55

    To: Chief Rowley

    From: Max D. Phillips

    Subject: 8mm movie film showing President

    Kennedy being shot

    Enclosed is an 8mm movie film

    taken by Mr. A. Zapruder, 501 Elm St., Dallas

    Texas (RI8-6071)

    Mr.. Zapruder was photographing

    the President at the instant he was shot.

    According to Mr. Zapruder, the position of

    the assassin was behind Mr. Zapruder.

    Note: Disregard personel scenes

    shown on Mr. Zapruder’s film.. Mr. Zapruder

    is in custody of the "master" film. Two prints

    were given to SAIC Sorrels, this date.

    The third print is forwarded.

    Max D. Phillips

    Special Agent - PRS

    b...

  11. here it is raymond from this trivia library .com part 7 site..

    6:00-6:30 P.M. Interrogation, Captain Fritz's Office

    "In time I will be able to show you that this is not my picture, but I don't want to answer any more questions. . . . I will not discuss this photograph [which was used on the cover of Feb. 21, 1964 Life magazine] without advice of an attorney. . . . There was another rifle in the building. I have seen it. Warren Caster had two rifles, a 30.06 Mauser and a .22 for his son. . . . That picture is not mine, but the face is mine. The picture has been made by superimposing my face. The other part of the picture is not me at all, and I have never seen this picture before. I understand photography real well, and that, in time, I will be able to show you that is not my picture and that it has been made by someone else. . . . It was entirely possible that the Police Dept. has superimposed this part of the photograph over the body of someone else. . . .

    © 1975 - 1981 by David Wallechinsky & Irving Wallace

    Reproduced with permission from "The People's Almanac" series of books.

    All rights reserved.

    You Are Here: Trivia » Last Words of Lee Harvey Oswald » JFK Assassination Last Words of Lee Harvey Oswald Part 7

    « JFK Assassination Last Words of Lee Harvey Oswald Part 6 JFK Assassination Last Words of Lee Harvey Oswald Part 8 »

  12. http://www.maebrussell.com/Mae%20Brussell%...e%20Oswald.html

    According to Mae Brussel, during his interrogation Lee Oswald said:

    I will not discuss this photograph without advice of an attorney. .

    Can anyone cite the actual source for this statement?

    HI RAYMOND IT'S FROM ONE OF FRITZ'S NOTES,NUMBER 5 BUT THE WORDING IS NOT EXACTLY AS SCRIBED AT MAE'S SITE..

    B..OR COULD BE PERHAPS WITHIN FRIT'ZS TESTIMONY... B)

  13. from lancer thanks...b

    Were the photos, as some have written, using the conflicting publications to

    send a message that Lee Oswald was working for both sides? Was this why the

    photo Marina had in the closet was being saved for June, his daughter?

    Goldsmith also noted this dilemma:

    The background is virtually identical in the photos, to an extent that is

    highly improbable if the photos were simply snapped by Marina Oswald, with

    the requisite rewinding motions made inbetween shots; the perfect, or nearly

    perfect, match between the backgrounds indicates either that a single

    background shot was used to create the photos, or that a tripod was used to

    take the shots (or both).

    (Note from Debra, the HSCA panel went over this opinion here:

    http://www.jfklancer.com/rifle_hsca.html . Scroll down to "(e) The identical

    backgrounds.")

    and

    The Militant and The Worker were the publications of Marxist organizations

    that were enemies; it makes no sense, from a Marxist's point of view, to put

    them together as Oswald did.

    (Course on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, John Goldsmith,

    Spring 1994, Spring 1995

    http://hum.uchicago.edu/~jagoldsm/Papers/JFK/11_HCSA.pdf )

    --

    What makes me wonder somewhat about the HSCA's findings is this document --

    found by John Armstrong -- written about by Tomlin on his website.

    "John Armstrong sent me a newly released HSCA document regarding the

    backyard photos which is extremely interesting. Apparently HSCA staff

    drafted reports based on evidence and sent the reports to each member of the

    photo panel for comments and suggestions. The document I am looking at is a

    transmittal letter returning a report on the backyard photos, from one

    member of the photo panel, David B. Eisendrath of Brooklyn, to Mickey

    Goldsmith, HSCA senior staff counsel. One of Eisendrath*s comments is very

    intriguing":

    QUOTE

    **I have already written to you about the photogrammetry of the backyard

    pictures and after several rereadings STILL feel that this should be

    re-edited, re-calculated, or destroyed. It*s a bomb-shell and should not be

    published in its present form.**

    UNQUOTE

    (from http://www.whokilledjfk.net/not%20investigate.htm )

    ---

  14. from a post at lancer thanks....("Firearms, Photographs, & Lee Harvey Oswald" by

    Ian Griggs http://www.jfklancer.com/byphotos.html )

    From John Goldsmith, professor at University of Chicago:

    1(B) At least one of the negatives found (or allegedly found) by the police

    at the Paines' house showed a pattern of scratches which positively

    associated it with the Imperial Reflex camera that

    Robert Oswald turned over to the FBI; this result was established by

    photographic experts assembled by the HSCA.

    2. Marina Oswald's testimony to the Warren Commission (although the

    inconsistencies in this account could arguably make this testimony into an

    argument against the validity of the photos);

    3. de Mohrenschildt's testimony;

    4. statements from workers at The Militant/The Worker (which?) that they had

    received a copy of the photo

    end quote

    b...

  15. CE133A & B were processed by a professional photo service - 133C-Dees and 133A- DeMohrenschildt were not. See page 147 of VOL VI.

    Also noted on this page: CE749 (the negative for CE133B) "contained small emulsion tears which indicated it had been abused in processing, as well as water spots indicative of improper washing or drying". Though there is nothing stated here to indicate what this might mean... it too, surely indicates amateur rather than professional work.

    So in effect... the negatives appear to have been processed privately... THEN given to a professional photo service to make the prints. Later, more first generation copies were made by an amateur. This would mean all the photos examined by the HSCA except 133A and B.

    Options for who did the amateur work:

    Oswald in his tiny office/cupboard at Neely St.

    Oswald at JCS

    Mike Paine in his own dark-room

    It is possible Lee could have developed the negatives in the tiny "office". But if he did that - surely Marina would have said? Moreover, he could certainly not have made any prints.

    It is also possible Lee could have done the work at JCS - however, there is nothing in the records to suggest that he did - or that anyone saw him do so in what was again, a fairly cramped work area.

    This leaves Michael Paine as the main possibility. He told Mallon that he had seen the photo, and he is in the records as having visited the Oswald's on Apr 2. If he saw a BY photo on that date, and assuming Mar 31 as the date they were taken, it could not have been 133A or B since these could not have been processed by any professional service of the time and made available prior to Apr 3. Conclusion? If he saw a photo that early, it was one that was processed privately. Perhaps he was in fact showing it to Oswald and not the other way around?

    hi Greg here is some info from harrison livingstone

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    FROM

    HARRISON LIVINGSTONE HIGH TREASON 11 PAGE 454...SEE AMAZON SEARCH BOOK..

    Oswald's wife, Marina Oswald, is the one who supposedly took the backyard pictures. However, in a recently recorded interview, she said of the backyard photos, "THESE AREN'T THE PICTURES I TOOK" (Livingstone 454, emphasis added).

    b..

  16. Please correct me if in error.but as I understand this.....just the one photo was examed....what about the other two and were , or was this an original from the n/as or a copy and this was i think a digital copy but the backyard photos taken were not....thanks for any further info...what effect would a digital copy have on any study..b

  17. Is it a coincidence that Zapruder filmed the events in Dealey Plaza? Is it possible that De Mohrenschildt suggested to Zapruder that he filmed the events that day? De Mohrenschildt was a shrewd businessman and maybe he had agreed with Zapruder to split the profits of the deal.

    I believe the original idea was to blame Castro for the assassination of JFK. The two chosen men to be set-up with the killing both had links with Cuba. At this time it actually helped for evidence to be produced that JFK was the victim of a conspiracy. The plan was to kill Oswald soon after the assassination and to allow the other patsy (possibly a Cuban-agent in Dallas at the time) to flee to Havana. However, LBJ refused to invade Cuba and so this left the authorities to change the story to Oswald as the lone-killer. The Zapruder Film now became a problem for those involved in the cover-up.

    Hi, John. De Mohrenschildt was a shrewd businessman. What does that have to do with Zapruder's home movie of the President passing by? They wanted to split the profits? What profits? It was just a brief home movie. No one knew the President was going to die supposedly.

    Also there seems to be 2 factions regarding Kennedy's murder. Those (Cuban Exiles, the Mob) who hated Castro and were angry with Kennedy for not liberating Cuba. And those who wanted Oswald to take the blame for killing Kennedy, a single lone gunman -- LBJ, CIA, Military, Big Business/oil barons. LBJ won the day it seems to me.

    Kathy C

    Zapruder Film Set for August Video Release

    Footage of JFK Assassination Likely to Restart Debate

    By George Lardner Jr.

    Washington Post Staff Writer

    Friday, June 26, 1998; Page B01

    For Abraham Zapruder, who made the movie, Frame 313 became a recurring nightmare. The film would play out in his dreams until the horrific head shot that killed the president snapped him awake.

    "I have seen it so many times," Zapruder, the Dallas dress manufacturer and accidental chronicler of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, said in a tearful deposition for the Warren Commission in 1964. "The thing would come every night -- I wake up and see this."

    Soon, anyone with a VCR will be able to see it and freeze-frame it again and again. Zapruder's silent 26-second film of Kennedy's murder, long tightly held by the Zapruder family, is coming in August to a video store near you in shattering color, with footage and details never shown before. The price: $19.98 for a VHS cassette, $24.98 for a digital video disc.

    Effectively upstaging the government, which resolved last year to seize the historic 1963 film on Aug. 1, 1998, and make it "available to the public at the lowest possible cost," Zapruder's heirs have teamed up with a leading video production company to put together a digitally enhanced version of the in-camera original that experts say is far clearer than any of the copies shown over the years.

    At the same time, lawyers for the Zapruder family have been asking the government for $18.5 million as the price for making the 8mm original itself a publicly owned "assassination record." Ticking away at 18.3 frames a second, it is the clock to Kennedy's murder and the best evidence of it. Some appraisers say it could bring much more at private auction. Some researchers think the Zapruders have made more than enough money from it already.

    "The first time I saw it, I literally gasped -- because it's so shocking," said Waleed Ali, president of MPI Home Video of Orland Park, Ill., which is producing the video. "It makes the one Oliver Stone used [for the movie "JFK"] look like a pale ghost. The clarity is breathtaking. This is literally as crisp and clear as the original in the vault."

    At some other crucial moments, though, the video seems just as blurred and puzzling as the original, especially when Zapruder jiggled his Bell & Howell camera in apparent reaction to the gunshots and perhaps other distractions. Zapruder had the best vantage point in Dealey Plaza, standing on a concrete abutment at the crest of a grassy knoll, but he also had vertigo, which made him hesitant to climb up on the ledge.

    Luckily for history, one of his assistants, Marilyn Sitzman, climbed up with him and held him steady as the fateful motorcade turned onto Elm Street.

    Titled "Image of an Assassination: A New Look at the Zapruder Film," the 45-minute production is part of a trend of embellishing box-office successes with historical narrative, insider interviews and insights into the filmmaking process. It offers compelling interviews of Sitzman and others, courtesy of the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, as well as a documentary showing the Zapruder original being photographed at the National Archives, frame by frame, and turned back into a movie.

    Longtime students of the JFK assassination predict there will be charges of doctoring nonetheless, not to mention a new rush of hypothesizers seeing what they want to see.

    "This is going to be a can of worms," says Harold Weisberg, a longstanding critic of the Warren Commission's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, killed Kennedy from behind, firing from a sniper's nest on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository.

    "There are people who think the film was doctored, that it was flown to the Soviet Union," Weisberg says. "The crazy people are going to get crazier, on both sides of the fence. Some people will look at the film and see things that aren't there. Others will look at it and not see what is there."

    Even so, he welcomes the public debut: "Let the people see it. Let them reach their own conclusions. I'm just sorry it's taken 35 years."

    One reason for that, as historian Richard B. Trask points out, was the revulsion Life magazine Publisher C.D. Jackson expressed on seeing the film after Life had bought the print rights from Zapruder for $50,000. Shocked by the thought of its morbid scenes being shown to the public before emotions had subsided, and determined to keep it from his competitors, he ordered purchase of all rights for another $100,000.

    Under the arrangement, made final on Nov. 25, 1963, the day of Kennedy's funeral, Zapruder was also to receive half of all gross receipts after Life had recouped its investment. Time Inc., in turn, agreed to treat the unique slice of history "with good taste and dignity."

    The first public showing of the film, as a result, took place in a New Orleans courtroom on Feb. 13, 1969, subpoenaed as part of New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison's wildly unsuccessful prosecution of businessman Clay Shaw. But it eluded television until March 6, 1975, when Geraldo Rivera showed a bootleg copy on his ABC talk show, "Good Night America."

    Apparently unwilling to police its use, Time Inc. announced the next month that it would return the film and all commercial rights to it to the Zapruder family for $1.

    It has been kept at the National Archives in "courtesy storage" for the Zapruder family since 1978, following a tour of duty at the House Assassinations Committee. The family has charged fees for commercial use of the film. One researcher, Gerard Selby Jr., said he was quoted a price of $30,000 when he was a graduate student trying to make a documentary. Informed sources say revenues for the Zapruders since 1963 have totaled about $650,000. Zapruder family lawyer James Silverberg says high prices may sometimes have been set to discourage certain uses, such as on book and magazine covers.

    "We just wanted the film treated in a dignified manner," says Henry Zapruder, Abraham's son. "The money issue has always been secondary. We were never disappointed when people who expressed an interest in showing the film ended up not showing it."

    Congress set the stage for a public "taking" of the film in 1992 when it passed the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act calling for disclosure of virtually all of the government's files on the assassination and setting up a review board to track them down and make them public. Officials contend the broad terms of the law automatically made the Zapruder original U.S. property since it had been "made available for use" by the Warren Commission in 1964.

    In April 1997, the review board formally declared the film "an assassination record" and resolved to "do all in its power to ensure that the best available copy . . . shall become available to the public at the lowest reasonable price." But board members were vague on how that could be done so long as the Zapruder family retained the copyright in the name of its LMH Co.

    Executive director T. Jeremy Gunn said the board's action pertained only to "physical possession of the original." Anticipating complicated negotiations, the board postponed the actual takeover date until Aug. 1, 1998.

    The Zapruders had already decided to make a video of it. A specially commissioned photographic expert hired by LMH spent five days at the National Archives in mid-March 1997, making magnified 4-by-5-inch transparencies of each frame from the original, including images between the sprocket holes that no copy has ever captured.

    "This [inter-sprocket material] constitutes about 20 percent of the information recorded on the film," says historian David R. Wrone, author of a brief history of the Zapruder movie. Because the Warren Commission used a Secret Service copy for its investigation -- the original could not be stopped to inspect individual frames because of possible damage to the film -- "it necessarily eliminated the 20 percent marginal matter."

    Now that these images can be viewed, fresh debate is likely. Weisberg points, for instance, to the still photo of Frame 202, where another photographer, Philip L. Willis, can be seen, leg lifted, about to step into the street after Kennedy's open limousine has passed. Weisberg contends Willis is lowering his camera, having just taken a picture at the moment the first shot was fired, hitting Kennedy. That would be too soon for the Warren Commission, which concluded that Oswald couldn't have had a good bead on Kennedy until about Frame 210, when the limousine emerged from the cover of a large live oak tree.

    Unfortunately, it isn't easy to tell from the video whether Willis is lifting his camera or lowering it at Frame 202. Frame 203 is blurred. Willis told the Warren Commission he took one picture of the president "smiling and waving" to the crowd. He said he then "started down the street" when a gunshot "caused me to squeeze the camera shutter, and I got a picture of the president as he was hit with the first shot."

    A deer hunter and World War II veteran, Willis also said he "felt certain" that the three shots he heard came from the Book Depository.

    Those watching the frames starting with 313, when the fatal shot explodes, will be struck by the forceful, backward movement of Kennedy's head -- seemingly indicating a shot from the front and to the right of the motorcade.

    "I watched it the other night with 12 other people. Not one of us thought the shot came from behind," said Ali. "Not only does the head recoil. You can see the head open up from the front."

    Look again, says G. Robert Blakey, former chief counsel for the House Assassinations Committee. "If you look carefully, the first thing you see is the head moving forward, very briefly. That is the bullet hitting the head from the rear. Then there is the snap back, after the head explodes. The X-rays of the skull and the fragments we have all indicate he was not hit from the front right."

    Come Aug. 25, the video's projected release date, viewers can judge for themselves. To guard against charges of doctoring, a crew from MPI Home Video went to the Archives to film the filming of the individual frames, before they were digitized and put back into motion picture format.

    "We're partners," Ali said of his company's arrangement with LMH. "We both own it together."

    Henry Zapruder said he did not "anticipate a large amount of income" from the video release. But Ali seemed more optimistic. MPI is planning an initial production of 100,000 VHS cassettes and 20,000 DVDs.

    the Zapruder's settled with the Gov for 16 million dollars..b

    © Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company

    http://karws.gso.uri.edu/Marsh/Zapruder/091l-062698-idx.html

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  18. OR BETTER STILL STUDY THEM FOR 46 ALMOST YEARS EARN JACKS CREDENTIAL'S THEN GET BACK TO ALL OF US INCLUDING JACK....THAT I SHALL AWAIT..

    DEAN MCADAM'S :blink: ISN'T THAT WHERE THE NEOCONS PLAY THEIR GAMES..I DO BELIEVE.THOUGH ON OCCASION THEY DO TAKE A STROLL.....TAKE CARE..BEST B ;)

    :lol:

    Everytime I am directed to McAdams website by a Lone Nutter I just shake my head, its hard to believe how much BS McAdams crams into his website for all the LNers to drool over, I dislike his website so much, but no need to go on and on about it

    And Bernice I agree with you 100% that Paul will never debunk or even come close to doing anything that would make me rethink any of Jack's work, what he does not understand is that not only do I think of Jack as one of the best researchers on the case but who has put in more time researching then Jack?

    Not many

    now Dean we must be fair mcAdams is not the only who clutters up his L/NRS site many/birds of a feather..there..he is far from alone.....and some even still spew the old i sit on the fence so hopefully they can get along with all........ that fence was taken down and replaced many

    years ago.....Jack has put in more time than so many combined and taken so much from so many also....I have found it amazing at times that he would still bother to attempt to continue to bring us the truth of the coup and cover-up ..of the jfk..assassination..cheers...best b.. :blink:

  19. http://www.archives.gov/research/jfk/selec...rt/part-1d.html

    n that was too definitive

    The Secret Service was deficient in the performance of its duties

    The Department of Justice failed to exercise initiative in supervising and directing the investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the assassination

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation performed with varying degrees of competency in the fulfillment of its duties

    The Central Intelligence Agency was deficient in its collection and sharing of information both prior to and subsequent to the assassination

    The Warren Commission performed with varying degrees of competency in the fulfillment of its duties

  20. I worked for a company that had around 180 employees in the same building and I knew every single person by first and last name.

    For Gary to say they probably didnt know each other after 7 years of working for the same company is crazy

    So before anyone starts a conspiracy theory based on Nardis, they need to research the company.

    For Gary to assume to tell anyone what or what not that they should do is his own conspiracy....

    here you go Dean.......thanks for posting your link mine would not take...scheesh....Fw: monk

    Wed, November 4, 2009

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    John-F-Kennedy.net - Amazing Web Of Abraham Zapruder by Gregory

    The 35th President of the United States ... Amazing Web Of Abraham Zapruder; The Man Who Filmed JFK's Assassination ... Abraham Zapruder-White Russian affiliation, 32nd degree Mason, active MEMBER of 2 CIA Proprietary Organizations: The Dallas Council On World Affairs and The Crusade For A Free Europe;

    1497k - 214 sec @ 56k

    This site uses Flash www.john-f-kennedy.net/amazingwebofabrahamzapruder.htm

    sec @ 56k

    This site uses Flash www.john-f-kennedy.net/amazingwebofabrahamzapruder.htm

    by Gregory Burnham

    The following may be of interest to those who would seek a glimpse at the beginning, even though it tends to raise questions about the only piece of evidence that we know is real, intact, unaltered, and 100% without blemish. Qualities that are curiously absent from the character of the one who filmed it...

    Consider:

    Abraham Zapruder-White Russian affiliation, 32nd degree Mason, active MEMBER of 2 CIA Proprietary Organizations: The Dallas Council On World Affairs and The Crusade For A Free Europe;

    These two organizations were CIA (backed) Domestic Operations in Dallas whose membership included:

    Abraham Zapruder, Clint Murchison (owner of the Dallas Cowboys at that time) , Mr. Byrd, (owner of the Texas School Book Depository), Sarah Hughes, who swore LBJ in as the 36th President while Air Force One was still on the ground in Dallas, George DeMohrenschildt, (CIA contract agent AND best friend of LHO), George Bush (also close friend of George DeMohrenschildt), Neil Mallon, (mentor that Bush named his son, Neil, after), H.L. Hunt, & Demitri Von Mohrenschildt (George D's brother).

    In 1953 and 1954 a woman named, Jeanne LeGon worked SIDE by SIDE with Abraham Zapruder at a high end clothing design firm called, Nardis of Dallas. Jeanne LeGon designed the clothing and Abraham Zapruder cut the patterns and the material for her.

    Incidentally, Abraham Zapruder's obituary mis-states the date/year that he departed Nardis of Dallas, incorrectly citing 1949. The correct year was 1959, [the same year that his "partner in design" Jeanne LeGon became known as, Jean LeGon DeMohrenschildt... She had married Lee Oswald's BEST FRIEND (to be), CIA Contract Agent, George DeMohrenschildt!]

    Lyndon Baines Johnson's personal secretary, Marie Fehmer, who flew back to Washington on Air Force One with LBJ on 11-22-1963, just happens to be the daughter of Olga Fehmer, currently living in Tyler, Texas. Olga Fehmer ALSO worked at Nardis of Dallas with Abraham Zapruder and Jean LeGon DeMohrenshildt.

    Quick Review:

    Olga Fehmer, the mother of LBJ's future personal secretary, (Marie) worked closely with the man who would later capture the assassination on film: Abraham Zapruder, in the same city of Dallas.

    George DeMohrenschildt's future wife Jeanne LeGon, also worked at NARDIS of Dallas, the city in which LHO's best friend and rabid anti-communist White Russian, George DeMohrenshildt - would convince Lee Oswald and his White Russian wife, Marina, to eventually reside.

    The Oswald's spent time together in the Soviet Union during their "courtship" -- much if not most of that time was spent in the city of Minsk, which is where George DeMohrenshildt and his brother, Demitri Von Mohrenschildt, grew up, after fleeing the place of their birth, Mozyr, which was often mistakenly thought to have been a part of Poland.

    Abraham Zapruder's co-worker, Jeanne LeGon and her husband George DeMohrenschildt introduced Lee Oswald to the daughter of one of George DeMohrenshildt's close friends, Ruth Paine. Ruth Paine's husband , Michael, whose step-father, Arthur Young collaborated with none other than Lyndon Baines Johnson's personal pilot, Joseph Mashman, to develop "BELL" helicopter (Fort Worth, Texas), was employed by Bell at the time of the assassination. 3,000-5,000 BELL helicopters were lost in Viet Nam and BELL's stockholders made a fortune replacing them.

    In September of 1976, George DeMohrenschildt was subjected to 9 electro-shock treatments at Parkland Hospital under the order given by one, Doctor DeLoach... first cousin of FBI Assisstant Director Cartha D. "Deke" DeLoach. His "doctor of record", Dr. Mendoza, ordered the administration of intravenous "drugs" upon DeMohrenschildt's being committed to Parkland Hospital for, "mental problems" - but, it was DeLoach that ordered the Electro-Shock Therapy. This episode occured during the time that George Bush was the Director of Central Intelligence and within weeks of DeMohrenshildt's having written a manuscript for a book entitled, "I Am A Patsy! I Am A Patsy!" which named names of various CIA and FBI personnel who framed Oswald to cover their tracks in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

    There is an "extant" version of this manuscript floating around the net [which is possibly a creation of a good forgerer like E. H. HUNT].

    On March 29, 1977... the same day DeMohrenschildt agreed to an interview with the HSCA, George DeMohrenschildt was found dead of a shotgun blast through his mouth by his daughter, Alexandra. His death was ruled a suicide.

    In 1964, a CIA report states that: "[she] was being monitored by CIA's James Jesus Angleton because she was having an affair with Mohammed al Fayed shortly after the JFK assassination..." James Jesus Angleton's name is signed at the bottom of that 41 page report. Under his signature is that of CIA asset, Jane Roman. Roman was the CIA agent who the record shows was charged with "monitoring" the movements of one, Lee Harvey Oswald, for the two months preceding the assassination.

    Miscellaneous:

    George Bush's roomate at Andover and Yale, who subsequently enlisted with him into the Navy was Demitri Von Mohrenschildt's step-son, Edward Gordon Hooker.

    George DeMohrenschildt was business partners with Mohammed al Fayed and Clamar J. Charles in Haiti, while working for Clint Murchison's Haitian interests. He also worked for Murchison's Three States Oil & Gas Co.

    Jackie Kennedy grew up calling George DeMohrenschildt, "Uncle George" -- as her mother Janet Auchincloss nearly married him after she had dated him during her divorce from Jackie's father, Black Jack Bouvier.

    At one time, DeMohrenschildt actually was engaged to be married to Jackie's mother's sister, (Jackie's aunt), Michelle.

    George Bush has selective Altzheimer's regarding his where abouts of 11-22-1963. Barbara Bush stated he was in Tyler, TX. although he has "speculated" that he may have been in Port Au Prince, Haiti.

    FBI Special Agent, Graham Kitchell states that he received a call from George Bush on 11-22-1963, and that George Bush (and his voice) were very familiar to him at that time. The call was made to the Houston FBI office and apparently did not originate from Haiti.

    Related Links:

    View The Abraham Zapruder Film

    Evidence Of Alteration Of The Abraham Zapruder Film

    View The Movie Trailer To Oliver Stone's "JFK"

    James E. Files, The Confessed Assassin (Video and Text)

    View The Orville Nix Film

    View The Restored Marie Muchmore Film

    The Headshots

    Abraham Zapruder Film Frame Comparisons

    ABC's Simulation: Spectacular Disinformation by Jim Fetzer

    Abraham Zapruder Film (Stabilized)

    Frame by Frame Stills Of The Zapruder Film

    JFK Assassination Movie (Two Kennedys)

    :o

    :lol:

    www.john-f-kennedy.net/amazingwebofabrahamzapruder.htm

    :blink:

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