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His initial two frame clip showing the violent shoving of the shoulders to the rear seems to be why the head was snapped backwards after if had rocked forward and bounced off Kennedy's chest.
What about the first shot which struck Kennedy in the throat?
Contary to the Warren Commission claim that it came from behind, passed through his neck, and wounded Governor Connally, that bullet came from the front.
In fact, the Washington Post reported on December 18, 1963, that a bullet was “found deep in his shoulder,” and the fact is, it was a rifle shot to the front neck that put a bullet “deep in his shoulder.” [Washington Post, 12-18-63, page 3]
The fact is, twenty-six days after the President of the United States was violently assassinated, neither the American public nor the American press were entertaining the idea that anyone would claim that one of the bullets passed through President Kennedy and wounded the Governor of Texas.
The article on December 18, 1963, also said that the bullet found in Kennedy’s shoulder caused “a hematoma, a pooling of blood inside the neck and shoulder muscles.”
But this article was already trying to hammer the point that he was shot from behind.
It cited the “unofficial report of pathologists,” which allegedly concurred on the idea that “a fragment was deflected and passed out the front of the throat,” which had allegedly been “explained over television” by “one of the surgeons” from the hospital.
Within months of the Warren Commission's new story in September 1963, that the bullet came from behind and passed through Kennedy's throat, the doctors who tried to save his life refuted it.
Medical examinations of the neck wound had been made “before a tracheotomy had altered the wound in the front of the President’s neck . . . Doctor Rufus Baxter said the neck wound was ‘unlikely’ to be a wound of exit and ‘would more resemble a wound of entry’ . . . Doctor Charles Carrico described the wound as ‘fairly round, had no jagged edges’ . . . Doctor Ronald Jones had described it as the sort ‘you would see in a bullet that is entering rather than exiting from a patient.’” [New York Times, 3-15-65, page 11]