Post by Rob Caprio on Nov 22, 2021 20:14:15 GMT -5
All portions ©️ Robert Caprio 2006-2024
chorus.stimg.co/23760368/merlin_44772047.jpg
bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/herald-review.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/df/bdf960b0-55c5-11e3-bd40-0019bb2963f4/5293361985447.image.jpg
The Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) included a November 22, 1963, FBI memorandum from A.H. Belmont to Clyde Tolson. The ARRB designated it ARRB MD 176.
It is pretty much a nondescript memorandum outlining Belmont’s instructions to Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Gordon Shanklin in Dallas, Texas. It shows the FBI’s intention to take control of the case even though they did not have jurisdiction at the time.
The one interesting comment is this.
Quote on
history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md176/pages/md176_0001a.gif
…I told SAC Shanklin that Secret Service had one of the bullets that struck President Kennedy and the other is lodged behind the President’s ear and we are arranging to get both of these. (ARRB MD 176, p. 1)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=707
Quote off
I have studied this case for a very long time, but I had never heard of this before. Whatever happened to this bullet that was lodged behind President John F. Kennedy’s (JFK) ear? We are not told as this bullet is never mentioned again from what I have seen. Why? Furthermore, what direction could this bullet have come from in order to lodge itself behind the ear (and I am assuming it’s the right ear as the memorandum doesn’t say)?
I found an article that gives more information on this as it highlights Parkland Hospital (PH) nurse Phyllis Hall's observations from November 22, 1963. Hall was in the emergency room of PH when JFK was brought in that day, and she was involved in trying to save JFK’s life. For some odd reason the Warren Commission (WC) didn’t feel the need to call someone who had been involved in the life saving efforts of that day, so we have to find her observations somewhere else.
Quote on
…Hall has revealed for the first time the existence of a mystery bullet, which she claims was fired into the president's body between his ear and shoulder.
Hall claims that there was another bullet lodged in President John F. Kennedy’s (center left) body, between his shoulder and ear. (STR New/Reuters) Hall, who was 28 at the time, spotted the bullet while cradling the president's head.
She said it was unlike any of the other bullets retrieved and was removed and never presented in evidence, the Sunday Mirror newspaper reports.
The limousine carrying the mortally wounded JFK races toward the hospital seconds after he was shot in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. (JUSTIN NEWMAN/AP)
"I could see a bullet lodged between his ear and his shoulder," she said. "It was pointed at its tip and showed no signs of damage. There was no blunting of the bullet or scarring around the shell from where it had been fired.
I'd had a great deal of experience working with gunshot wounds, but I had never seen anything like this before. It was about one-and-a-half inches long - nothing like the bullets that were later produced.”
Hall also said, "It was taken away but never have I seen it presented in evidence or heard what happened to it. It remains a mystery." (New York Daily News, David Harding, 11/10/2013)
www.nydailynews.com/news/national/jfk-mystery-bullet-lodged-body-nurse-article-1.1512283
Quote off
Hall said that the bullet between his shoulder and ear had no damage to it, and it was one-and-a-half inches long. Hall said that she had never seen a bullet like this before and she had a lot of experience with gunshot wounds. She said that it looked nothing like the bullets later produced.
What happened to this bullet? Why was it never put into evidence? The answer is obvious -- it was not a 6.5 mm bullet, and that was all that was used in the assassination of JFK according to the WC. This bullet shows that there was a second shooter and a conspiracy all by itself.
chorus.stimg.co/23760368/merlin_44772047.jpg
bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/herald-review.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/df/bdf960b0-55c5-11e3-bd40-0019bb2963f4/5293361985447.image.jpg
The Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) included a November 22, 1963, FBI memorandum from A.H. Belmont to Clyde Tolson. The ARRB designated it ARRB MD 176.
It is pretty much a nondescript memorandum outlining Belmont’s instructions to Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Gordon Shanklin in Dallas, Texas. It shows the FBI’s intention to take control of the case even though they did not have jurisdiction at the time.
The one interesting comment is this.
Quote on
history-matters.com/archive/jfk/arrb/master_med_set/md176/pages/md176_0001a.gif
…I told SAC Shanklin that Secret Service had one of the bullets that struck President Kennedy and the other is lodged behind the President’s ear and we are arranging to get both of these. (ARRB MD 176, p. 1)
www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=707
Quote off
I have studied this case for a very long time, but I had never heard of this before. Whatever happened to this bullet that was lodged behind President John F. Kennedy’s (JFK) ear? We are not told as this bullet is never mentioned again from what I have seen. Why? Furthermore, what direction could this bullet have come from in order to lodge itself behind the ear (and I am assuming it’s the right ear as the memorandum doesn’t say)?
I found an article that gives more information on this as it highlights Parkland Hospital (PH) nurse Phyllis Hall's observations from November 22, 1963. Hall was in the emergency room of PH when JFK was brought in that day, and she was involved in trying to save JFK’s life. For some odd reason the Warren Commission (WC) didn’t feel the need to call someone who had been involved in the life saving efforts of that day, so we have to find her observations somewhere else.
Quote on
…Hall has revealed for the first time the existence of a mystery bullet, which she claims was fired into the president's body between his ear and shoulder.
Hall claims that there was another bullet lodged in President John F. Kennedy’s (center left) body, between his shoulder and ear. (STR New/Reuters) Hall, who was 28 at the time, spotted the bullet while cradling the president's head.
She said it was unlike any of the other bullets retrieved and was removed and never presented in evidence, the Sunday Mirror newspaper reports.
The limousine carrying the mortally wounded JFK races toward the hospital seconds after he was shot in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. (JUSTIN NEWMAN/AP)
"I could see a bullet lodged between his ear and his shoulder," she said. "It was pointed at its tip and showed no signs of damage. There was no blunting of the bullet or scarring around the shell from where it had been fired.
I'd had a great deal of experience working with gunshot wounds, but I had never seen anything like this before. It was about one-and-a-half inches long - nothing like the bullets that were later produced.”
Hall also said, "It was taken away but never have I seen it presented in evidence or heard what happened to it. It remains a mystery." (New York Daily News, David Harding, 11/10/2013)
www.nydailynews.com/news/national/jfk-mystery-bullet-lodged-body-nurse-article-1.1512283
Quote off
Hall said that the bullet between his shoulder and ear had no damage to it, and it was one-and-a-half inches long. Hall said that she had never seen a bullet like this before and she had a lot of experience with gunshot wounds. She said that it looked nothing like the bullets later produced.
What happened to this bullet? Why was it never put into evidence? The answer is obvious -- it was not a 6.5 mm bullet, and that was all that was used in the assassination of JFK according to the WC. This bullet shows that there was a second shooter and a conspiracy all by itself.