PSC482G, Spring 2000
Assignment 2, due Monday 24 January 2000
Critical thinking 2
Read:
The essays “Types of evidence useful for understanding the JFK
assassination” and “Shadings of eyewitness testimony.”
Answer these
questions:
“Types of evidence”:
This assignment is designed to start you thinking about the properties of different types of evidence and their inherent degrees of usefulness. The table below lists ten examples of evidence from the JFK case, each of which is explained in more detail below the table. For each entry, fill in whether it is testimonial or demonstrative (T or D), direct or indirect (D or I), conclusive, persuasive, or weak (C, P, or W), testable or untestable (T or U), and right or wrong (R or W). Fill in the last column only if appropriate (if the evidence is testable) and if you already know the answer.
Evidence |
Test or real |
Directness |
Strength |
Testability |
Correctness |
Earwitness reports of shots |
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Bullet fragments |
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Mannicher-Carcano rifle |
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X-rays of head fragments |
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Howard Brennan |
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Julia Mercer |
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Footprints in mud |
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Anger of Cuban exiles |
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JFK’s motions on Zapruder film |
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Shots as heard from fifth floor of TSBD |
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Examples of evidence
1. “Earwitness” reports by nearly
100 persons in Dealey Plaza who heard shots fired from the grassy knoll.
2. Bullet fragments recovered from the
scene that were traced ballistically to only one rifle.
3. The Mannlicher-Carcano rifle owned by
Lee Harvey Oswald and allegedly fired by him.
4. The X-rays of Kennedy’s head, taken
during the autopsy, that show lead fragments coning outward from the small hole
in the back to the large hole in the right front, as evidence for hit from rear.
5. Howard Brennan’s report of seeing the
final shot fired from the Texas School Book Depository, plus his description of
the shooter.
6. Julia Mercer’s report of seeing a man
carrying a rifle to the grassy knoll an hour before the assassination, as
evidence for a shooter on the knoll.
7. The footprints found in the mud behind
the picket fence on the grassy knoll by James L. Simmons, as evidence of shooter
on the knoll.
8. The Cuban exiles’ anger over the
failed Bay of Pigs invasion as reason for them to kill Kennedy.
9. Kennedy’s dual motions after the head
shot, as shown by the Zapruder film, as evidence for direction of final shot.
10. Reports by the three men on the fifth
floor of the Depository, who heard a rifle being fired directly above them.
“Shadings of eyewitness testimony”:
Here are ten characteristics of Dealey Plaza during and after the assassination. Explain how each would have affected the ability of eyewitnesses to perceive and record the events and later describe them.
1. The shots came unexpectedly.
2. The shots came from a direction or
directions that were difficult to determine because the plaza was ringed by tall
buildings and other structures that created complex echoes.
3. The crowd in the plaza must have
thought that it was being fired upon.
4. Panic ensued, and some witnesses
dropped to the ground instinctively.
5. The whole thing was over in a matter of
seconds and the motorcade sped away to Parkland Memorial Hospital.
6. The Dallas police immediately began
searching the area and the nearby buildings.
7. The Dallas police began questioning
people and taking statements within minutes.
8. People compared impressions and tried
to determine what had just happened.
9. Everyone knew that their president,
their governor, and/or their vice president had been fired upon.
10. The whole event was set against the
backdrop of the height of the Cold War.