At approximately 1:45 PM on November 22, 1963, Parkland Hospital maintenance engineer Darrell C. Tomlinson noticed a bullet roll out from under the mattress pad of a stretcher near an elevator on the ground floor. He alerted O.P. Wright, the hospital's director of security and a former deputy sheriff. Wright picked it up, examined it, and handed it to Secret Service agent Richard Johnsen.[2][3] This bullet would become CE 399 — the most analyzed, most debated projectile in forensic history. FACT
The word "pristine" has become almost inseparable from CE 399, but it is a characterization applied by critics — the Warren Commission never used the term.[5] When viewed from the side, the bullet looks remarkably intact. When viewed from the base, it shows distinct lateral compression — the kind of vise-like deformation that indicates significant force. FACT
The question is whether this amount of deformation is consistent with a bullet that allegedly smashed through Kennedy's upper back and neck, then entered Connally's torso, shattered his fifth rib, exited his chest, penetrated his right wrist (shattering the radius bone), and finally lodged in his left thigh. Seven wound channels. Two human bodies. One bullet.
The Warren Commission's own testing created a devastating comparison problem. When bullets of the same type were fired into cadaver wrist bones at Edgewood Arsenal, all ten test bullets were severely deformed[10][20] — dramatically more damaged than CE 399. FACT The only test bullet that closely matched CE 399's minimal deformation was one fired into a long tube of cotton — a medium offering virtually no resistance.
Supporters counter that the test bullets struck wrist bone at full muzzle velocity, whereas if the single-bullet theory is correct, CE 399 would have been significantly slowed (to roughly 900 ft/s)[24] by passing through Kennedy and Connally's torso before hitting the wrist, and at that reduced velocity, less deformation is expected. STRONG EVIDENCE
CE 399 weighed 158.6 grains. Unfired Western Cartridge Company (WCC) Mannlicher-Carcano bullets averaged 160.85 grains, meaning CE 399 lost between 1.4 and 2.4 grains. But fragments were recovered from Connally's wrist and thigh, and Dr. Robert Shaw, who operated on Connally, testified that "more than three grains of metal" remained embedded[29] in the governor's wrist alone. STRONG EVIDENCE
If more metal was left in the body than was missing from the bullet, the arithmetic does not work. Defenders argue Shaw's estimate was imprecise[28] — that the actual recovered fragments weighed approximately 0.5 grains, with the remaining visible specks being too small to weigh. The controversy has never been fully resolved.
The single bullet theory (SBT) was developed by junior Warren Commission counsel Arlen Specter (later a U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania)[16] as a necessary explanation for a problem the Commission could not otherwise solve: if the bullet that hit Kennedy in the back and exited his throat did not go on to strike Connally, where did it go? There was no damage to the limousine interior consistent with a bullet of that caliber and velocity.
A single 6.5mm round fired from the sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository entered Kennedy's upper back (just right of the spine), transited the neck without striking bone, and exited the throat below the Adam's apple. The bullet then entered Connally's back just below the right armpit, shattered approximately 10 cm of his fifth rib, exited below the right nipple, entered the dorsal side of his right wrist, fractured the radius bone, exited the palmar side of the wrist, and finally embedded shallowly in his left thigh. TRADITION
The trajectory's plausibility depends critically on where Connally was sitting relative to Kennedy. Connally rode in a jump seat that was approximately 3 inches lower and 3 inches inboard (left)[1] compared to the president's seat in the right rear of the limousine. FACT
Critics have long charged that the bullet would need to change direction in midair to travel from Kennedy's throat to Connally's right armpit. Defenders respond that this is a misperception based on viewing the limousine seats as directly aligned — the jump seat offset means the trajectory is actually a straight line from the sixth-floor window, with no mid-air course change required. STRONG EVIDENCE
Dale Myers' Emmy-winning 2003 computer animation for ABC's Beyond Conspiracy[31] demonstrated that a straight-line trajectory from the sixth-floor window, through both men at their Zapruder-film positions, was geometrically possible. However, this analysis has been challenged on its precision regarding Connally's exact torso rotation at the moment of impact. STRONG EVIDENCE
In October 2023, Knott Laboratory — a forensic engineering firm in Colorado — released a digital reconstruction of the assassination that directly challenged the SBT. Using 36 high-definition laser scans of Dealey Plaza (capturing two million data points per second)[14] combined with photogrammetric match-moving against the Zapruder film, they concluded that the SBT trajectory was scientifically impossible. EMERGING
"Governor Connally, his wound is sitting 6 to 10 inches toward the outside of the vehicle. The analysis that we've gone through so far is that those can't be the same bullet. They don't align. We can't make Governor Connally's position match." — Stanley Stoll, CEO, Knott Laboratory (November 2023)[13]
This study represents the most technologically sophisticated trajectory analysis to date, though it has yet to be independently replicated or peer-reviewed.
In any criminal prosecution, the chain of custody is the documented trail proving that a piece of evidence is the same item recovered at the scene. For CE 399, this chain is not merely weak — it is, by the standards of any courtroom in America, broken. STRONG EVIDENCE
Tomlinson found the bullet on one of two stretchers near a ground-floor elevator.[2] The Warren Commission needed it to be Governor Connally's stretcher, because the theory required the bullet to have fallen from Connally's thigh wound. But when Arlen Specter pressed Tomlinson on this point during his testimony, Tomlinson refused to confirm it was Connally's stretcher.[3] FACT
Investigator Gary Aguilar and others have argued that the evidence more strongly suggests the bullet was found on a stretcher belonging to a patient named Ronald Fuller, who had been treated for a completely unrelated injury — meaning the bullet had no connection to the assassination at all.
| Handler | Role | Could Identify CE 399? |
|---|---|---|
| Darrell Tomlinson | Discovered bullet | NO — "cannot positively identify" |
| O.P. Wright | Hospital security | NO — described pointed tip (CE 399 is round-nose) |
| Richard Johnsen | Secret Service | NO — "could not identify this bullet" |
| Gerald Behn | Secret Service (WH detail chief) | NEVER ASKED |
| James Rowley | Secret Service chief | NO — "could not identify this bullet" |
| Elmer Todd | FBI agent | YES — inscribed initials |
| Robert Frazier | FBI Laboratory | YES — inscribed initials |
The first five people in the chain — the only ones who saw the original Parkland bullet — could not confirm CE 399 was the same object. Only the last two handlers, FBI agents who marked the bullet after it arrived at the lab, could identify it. STRONG EVIDENCE
When researcher Josiah Thompson interviewed O.P. Wright in November 1966, Wright described the bullet he handled as having a pointed tip[21] — not the rounded nose of CE 399. Wright rejected CE 399 as the Parkland bullet. Twice. STRONG EVIDENCE
"That's not the bullet I found. The bullet I had was pointed at the tip." — O.P. Wright to Josiah Thompson (November 1966), as reported in Six Seconds in Dallas
An FBI memo dated July 7, 1964, claimed that agent Bardwell Odum had visited Parkland Hospital[3] and that Wright and Tomlinson had "tentatively identified" CE 399. But a June 20, 1964 memo flatly contradicted this, stating that "neither Darrell C. Tomlinson nor O.P. Wright can identify bullet." FACT
When researchers later tracked down Bardwell Odum himself, he denied ever handling the bullet[3] or visiting Parkland for that purpose. He stated he would have remembered doing so, since he and Wright were personal friends. The July memo appears to be a fabrication. STRONG EVIDENCE
The chain of custody for CE 399 would not survive a Daubert hearing in any modern American courtroom. The first five handlers cannot identify the bullet, one witness describes a physically different object, and the FBI memo claiming identification has been contradicted both by an earlier FBI memo and by the agent allegedly involved.
For decades, the strongest scientific argument linking CE 399 to the fragments in Connally's body came from neutron activation analysis (NAA) — a technique that measures trace element concentrations in bullet lead. The logic was simple: if the fragments matched CE 399's chemical signature, they came from the same bullet.
Dr. Vincent P. Guinn of the University of California, Irvine, performed NAA for the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) in 1977.[27] He measured antimony (Sb) and silver (Ag) concentrations in CE 399 and the recovered fragments, concluding that the evidence was consistent with exactly two bullets — supporting the Warren Commission's findings. TRADITION
Guinn's analysis rested on two critical assumptions: (1) that Mannlicher-Carcano bullet lead was unusually heterogeneous between bullets, and (2) that it was relatively homogeneous within a single bullet. If both were true, matching fragment chemistry to CE 399 would be powerful evidence.
In July 2006, Erik Randich and Patrick M. Grant of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory published[6] "Proper Assessment of the JFK Assassination Bullet Lead Evidence from Metallurgical and Statistical Perspectives" in the Journal of Forensic Sciences. They demolished Guinn's second assumption. FACT
Using micrographic analysis of Mannlicher-Carcano bullets, Randich and Grant demonstrated that the bullet lead exhibits a crystalline structure in which antimony "microsegregates" around lead crystals.[6] The crystals are large enough that a sample from one portion of a single bullet could show antimony levels one to two orders of magnitude higher or lower than a sample from another portion of the same bullet. Guinn's assumption of within-bullet homogeneity was wrong. FACT
In May 2007, a team led by Cliff Spiegelman (Professor of Statistics, Texas A&M University), William A. Tobin (former Chief Forensic Metallurgist of the FBI), William D. James, and Stuart Wexler published in the Annals of Applied Statistics.[7] They tested bullets from the same production lot as those attributed to Oswald and reached a devastating conclusion: FACT
"The evidence used to rule out a second assassin is fundamentally flawed." — Spiegelman, Tobin, James & Wexler (2007)[7], Annals of Applied Statistics
Their key finding: two-element chemical matches between random Mannlicher-Carcano fragments are not extraordinarily rare. If bullets come from the same box of ammunition, such matches become even more common. The NAA evidence, once considered near-definitive, cannot reliably distinguish between fragments from the same bullet and fragments from different bullets of the same production lot.[25][26]
As of 2026, the NAA evidence for the two-bullet/single-shooter scenario is considered scientifically invalid by the forensic metallurgy community. In 2005, the FBI itself formally abandoned compositional bullet lead analysis (CBLA) as an investigative technique[8], based partly on a National Research Council review prompted by the same concerns Randich, Grant, and Spiegelman raised.
Forensic firearms examiner Lucien C. Haag, with over 50 years of experience and 200+ published papers, conducted extensive testing[10][35] of Western Cartridge Company 6.5mm Mannlicher-Carcano ammunition — the exact type attributed to Oswald. His findings revealed properties that were unknown to forensic examiners in 1963 and remain poorly understood today. STRONG EVIDENCE
In soft tissue: The WCC bullet is extraordinarily stable. Haag's gelatin tests showed it remains "intact and nose-forward during penetration,"[35] producing entry and exit wounds that are "nearly indistinguishable." The velocity loss through a 6-inch block of ballistic soap was only 150–180 ft/s, meaning a bullet exiting Kennedy's throat would retain approximately 1,800 ft/s — more than enough to penetrate steel. STRONG EVIDENCE
Against bone: The same bullet "totally changes character" when striking thick bone[10], behaving more like a soft-point hunting round — yawing, deflecting, and fragmenting. This dual personality explains why autopsy pathologists initially thought they were looking at wounds from two different calibers. STRONG EVIDENCE
Supporters of the SBT argue that by the time CE 399 reached Connally's wrist, it had been dramatically slowed by transiting two bodies. At the estimated impact velocity of ~900 ft/s against the wrist (down from an initial ~2,100 ft/s), the bullet would cause the radius fracture but sustain far less deformation than test bullets fired into wrist bone at full velocity. This is the strongest ballistic argument in favor of CE 399's condition. THEORETICAL
The Army's wound ballistics tests at Edgewood Arsenal fired identical ammunition into cadaver tissue.[20] Every bullet that struck wrist bone at full velocity was severely deformed — nothing like CE 399. FACT However, no test was conducted at the reduced velocity the SBT predicts for the wrist impact, leaving a critical gap in the experimental record that has never been filled.
Dr. John K. Lattimer, a urologist at Columbia University[33] and one of the first civilians to view the Kennedy autopsy materials, conducted extensive shooting experiments with Carcano ammunition. His cadaver tests produced 41 fragments — far more than CE 399 left behind — but he argued this supported the SBT because it demonstrated the bullet's capacity for leaving fragments while remaining structurally intact. STRONG EVIDENCE
In December 2019, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) created high-resolution 3D digital replicas of CE 399[11][12] and other bullet fragments using focus variation microscopy. The scans capture surface details down to the microscopic level and are now publicly available through the National Archives. This preservation effort ensures that the physical evidence can be studied indefinitely without further handling of the originals. FACT
Abraham Zapruder's 8mm home movie, running at 18.3 frames per second,[32] is the clock that makes the single bullet theory necessary. It is not a theory of choice — it is a theory of elimination. FACT
An oak tree partially obscured the line of fire from the sixth-floor window until approximately Zapruder frame 210. The Warren Commission concluded Kennedy was struck between frames 210 and 225 (a window of roughly 0.8 seconds). The fatal head shot occurs at frame 313. FBI test firings established that Oswald's bolt-action Mannlicher-Carcano rifle required a minimum of 2.3 seconds[16] (approximately 42 Zapruder frames) between successive aimed shots. FACT
Gerald Posner in Case Closed (1993)[31] and Dale Myers in his 2003 animation both identify frames 223–224 as the moment both men are struck simultaneously. At frame 224, Connally's right suit-jacket lapel visibly flips outward — which they interpret as the bullet's shockwave exiting his chest. Both men begin showing distress reactions by frame 225. If both were struck at the same instant, only one bullet is required, and no timing problem exists. STRONG EVIDENCE
Warren Commission critics note that Connally's most dramatic physical reaction — his torso crumpling, his face contorting — does not begin until frames 234–238, a full 0.5 to 1.5 seconds after Kennedy's initial reaction. If this represents the moment Connally was actually hit by a separate bullet, the 2.3-second minimum firing interval means that bullet could not have come from Oswald's rifle. Another weapon — another shooter — would be required. STRONG EVIDENCE
"If the single bullet theory is wrong, then there had to be more than one gunman. And if there was more than one gunman, there was a conspiracy." — Common formulation of the logical dependency, stated by numerous researchers
Governor John B. Connally Jr. — the man whose body the bullet allegedly passed through — rejected the single bullet theory for the rest of his life. He died in 1993 without ever accepting it.[18] FACT
On April 21, 1964, Connally testified before the Warren Commission[18] that he was struck by the second shot, not the first. He described hearing a rifle shot, beginning to turn to his right to look back at the president, and then feeling the impact in his own back before he could complete the turn. His testimony placed his wounding distinctly after Kennedy's first reaction — consistent with a separate bullet. FACT
"They talk about the 'one bullet, or single bullet, theory.' It is not my theory. It is not my belief. ... It was not the bullet that hit me." — Governor John Connally, as quoted in media interviews and confirmed by Nellie Connally's consistent corroborating testimony
Connally told Life magazine he believed, to the best of his judgment, that the bullet hit him at approximately Zapruder frame 234[18] — nine frames and roughly half a second after the Commission said he was struck. Nellie Connally, seated directly beside her husband, consistently supported his account and maintained it until her death. FACT
The Warren Commission acknowledged the Connallys' testimony but effectively set it aside, concluding that the couple was mistaken about the timing due to the chaos and shock of the moment. This remains one of the most controversial decisions in the investigation: the Commission chose its theory over the sworn testimony of the man who was actually shot.
Gerald Posner (Case Closed, 1993)[31]: Posner argues the SBT is the only explanation consistent with the physical evidence. The bullet exited Kennedy's throat with ~1,800 ft/s of remaining velocity. There was no damage to the limousine interior consistent with such a high-velocity impact. The jump seat offset creates a straight-line trajectory. The lapel flip at frame 224 proves simultaneous impact. STRONG EVIDENCE
Dale Myers (2003 computer reconstruction): Myers spent ten years building a 3D animation synced to the Zapruder film, which won an Emmy for ABC. He demonstrated geometric alignment between the sixth-floor window, Kennedy's back wound, and Connally's entry wound, concluding the trajectory was not merely possible but probable. STRONG EVIDENCE
Vincent Bugliosi (Reclaiming History, 2007)[23]: Bugliosi devotes over 300 pages to the SBT, calling it "not a theory but a proven fact." He argues that the evidence has moved from hypothesis to demonstration and that "no sensible mind that is also informed can plausibly make the case that the bullet that struck President Kennedy in the upper right part of his back did not go on to hit Governor Connally." THEORETICAL
Lucien Haag (ballistics testing, 2014–2019): Haag's gelatin and soap-block testing established the WCC Carcano bullet's unique soft-tissue stability and high residual velocity, providing the strongest modern ballistic support for the SBT. STRONG EVIDENCE
Dr. Cyril Wecht (1931–2024): The most prominent forensic pathologist to challenge the SBT, Wecht served as president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and performed over 21,000 autopsies.[4][19] As the lone dissenter on the HSCA's nine-member forensic pathology panel, Wecht argued that the left-to-right trajectory from the sixth-floor window could not intersect with Connally's right armpit given the men's positions. He challenged anyone to produce a single bullet from hundreds of thousands of forensic cases that had done what CE 399 allegedly did — no one ever did.[34][36] Wecht died on May 13, 2024. STRONG EVIDENCE
Harold Weisberg (1913–2002): Often called "the dean of assassination researchers," Weisberg spent decades investigating the medical and ballistic evidence through FOIA litigation.[30] He obtained the Edgewood Arsenal wound ballistics report after it was withheld for ten years and demonstrated the profound mismatch between CE 399 and every test bullet that struck bone. STRONG EVIDENCE
Josiah Thompson (Six Seconds in Dallas, 1967; Last Second in Dallas, 2021): A philosophy professor turned private investigator, Thompson gained early access to the Zapruder film through Life magazine. His 2021 book, published by the University Press of Kansas,[21][22] argues that Kennedy was hit twice in the head within 0.71 seconds from diametrically opposed directions — a finding that, if correct, makes the single-shooter scenario impossible regardless of the SBT. EMERGING
Knott Laboratory (2023 reconstruction)[13][14][15]: The most recent technological challenge to the SBT, finding a 6–10 inch trajectory discrepancy that makes the single-bullet path "scientifically impossible" based on their laser-scanned reconstruction. EMERGING
CE 399 is not merely one piece of evidence among many. It is the keystone of the lone-gunman conclusion. Remove it, and the entire structure collapses. Here is the logical chain: FACT
1. Three spent cartridge cases were found on the sixth floor.[16] The Warren Commission concluded three shots were fired.
2. One shot missed entirely (it struck a curb near bystander James Tague).[9] One shot was the fatal head shot at frame 313. That leaves one shot to account for all of Kennedy's non-fatal wounds and all of Connally's wounds.
3. If that one remaining shot hit Kennedy but did not hit Connally, then a fourth bullet is needed to wound Connally. But only three cartridge cases were found. A fourth bullet means a second rifle. A second rifle means a second shooter. A second shooter means a conspiracy.
4. Even without the cartridge-case count, the Zapruder timing makes it impossible for a single bolt-action rifle to have fired separate shots at Kennedy and Connally within the observed window. If they were not hit by the same bullet, someone else was shooting.
This is why the single bullet theory exists. Not because the evidence naturally pointed to it, but because without it, the lone-gunman conclusion is logically impossible. Arlen Specter understood this when he developed the theory, and every investigator since has understood it. The magic bullet is the thread that, if pulled, unravels the official story entirely.
Can one 6.5mm Mannlicher-Carcano bullet cause seven wound channels through two men, shatter a rib and a radius bone, and emerge weighing only 1.4–2.4 grains less than it started? If yes, Lee Harvey Oswald could have acted alone. If no, he did not. Sixty-two years later, the question remains open.
On March 17, 2025, President Donald Trump directed the full release of all remaining classified JFK assassination records. Approximately 80,000 pages of previously redacted documents were published by the National Archives with no redactions.[17] FACT
The released documents primarily concern CIA operations, Oswald's movements in Mexico City, and Cold War intelligence activities. As of April 2026, no newly released documents have directly addressed the ballistic evidence or the single bullet theory. The releases do not appear to contradict the Warren Commission's core conclusions, but they do reveal extensive details about the CIA's awareness of and interest in Oswald before the assassination[37][38] — details explored in other reports in this series. FACT
Developed the single bullet theory. Conducted the reconstruction and re-enactment at Dealey Plaza for the Commission.
Most prominent forensic pathologist to challenge the SBT. Lone dissenter on the HSCA forensic panel. Performed 21,000+ autopsies. Published over 600 forensic papers.
Conducted the most comprehensive modern ballistics testing of WCC Carcano ammunition. Published findings in the AFTE Journal (2014–2019). Demonstrated the bullet's unique dual behavior in soft tissue vs. bone.
Published the 2006 metallurgical rebuttal of Guinn's NAA analysis in Journal of Forensic Sciences. Demonstrated antimony microsegregation in Mannlicher-Carcano bullets, invalidating the fragment-matching methodology.
Led the 2007 statistical reanalysis of bullet lead evidence with FBI metallurgist William Tobin. Demonstrated that NAA matches between assassination fragments are not statistically significant.
Spent 10 years creating a 3D computer reconstruction of the assassination for ABC News (2003). Won an Emmy. Demonstrated geometric feasibility of the SBT trajectory.
Author of Six Seconds in Dallas (1967) and Last Second in Dallas (University Press of Kansas, 2021). Argued for multiple shooters based on Zapruder film analysis and fragment evidence.
Author of Case Closed (1993), the most influential defense of the lone-gunman theory. Developed detailed Zapruder frame analysis supporting simultaneous impact at frames 223–224.
Author of Reclaiming History (2007), a 1,612-page defense of the Warren Commission's conclusions. Called the SBT "not a theory but a proven fact."
Conducted 2023 laser-scanned reconstruction of Dealey Plaza using 36 high-definition scans. Found 6–10 inch trajectory discrepancy that they concluded makes the SBT "scientifically impossible."
"Dean of assassination researchers." Used FOIA litigation to obtain the Edgewood Arsenal wound ballistics report withheld for 10 years. Author of Post Mortem (1975) and the Whitewash series.