Mr. LIEBELER. There is an area circled here with the letter "C" in it. Is that where the policeman ran toward the grassy area; included in that circle, is that right? "
direction of the mark is "the grassy knoll"?
As people keep trying to explain to you, repeatedly but to no avail,
it doesn't matter where Tague thought the shot came from! We already know, from abundant evidence,
exactly where it came from: the easternmost window on the south side of the 6th floor of the TSBD. Why can't you understand this? Why are you still so desperately anxious to fool yourself into thinking it came from someplace else?
Draw a line from Oswald's window in the southeast corner of the TSBD through the "X" on Elm St where JFK was hit by the head shot. Continue that line to the southwest until it crosses the south curb of Main St. It does so very close to the lead mark on the curb just east of where Tague was standing at the time. This is completely consistent with Tague having been hit by a fragment of Oswald's third bullet that exited the front of JFK's head, continued downrange to that point on the curb and then ricocheted into Tague's face. Or Tague could have been hit by a separate fragment from the one that hit the curb, with the two taking almost the same trajectories; there's no way to know for sure. We do know that the bullet that hit JFK in the head fragmented extensively and the total mass of the recovered fragments in the limo was considerably less than that of an intact bullet. Obviously much of the bullet went elsewhere.
When seen from above, Oswald's rifle, JFK's head and the curb mark (or Tague) are close to collinear (form a straight line). But they do not have to be
exactly so because the fragment(s) were certainly deflected as they passed through JFK. In fact, an upward deflection was necessary just to clear the windshield. Fragments of the third shot are known to have struck the inside of the windshield and a modest upward deflection (16 degrees according to Dale Myers) was also necessary for them to reach this spot.