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Badge man

"Badge man" is the title given to a photographic image that some President John F. Kennedy assassination researchers claim is a grassy knoll assassin seen within a polaroid photograph that close witness Mary Moorman captured on November 22, 1963 within Dealey Plaza in Dallas Texas.

In the Moorman polaroid photo (her fifth that day) is seen all of the Presidential limousine occupants, several other close witnesses (including Abraham Zapruder filming), three Dallas police motorcycle Presidential escorts, and much of the area comprising the grassy knoll. The photo has been calculated that it was captured between the Zapruder film equivalent concurrent frames of Z-315 and 316 (less than one-sixth of a second after President Kennedy's head first exploded at Z-313). On the actual polaroid photo, the area that the "badge man" supposedly appears within is about one-quarter inch square.

In 1982 Gary Mack, the longtime (and current-as-of-2004) curator and archivist for the Dealey Plaza Sixth Floor Museum (formerly the Texas School Book Depository) first claimed to discover the "badge man" image. He labeled this image "badge man" because the image when magnified and brightness and contrast enhanced, supposedly, shows a dark uniformed Dallas policeman wearing his police patrolman’s metal badge on his chest, displays his left shoulder crest curved police patrolman patch, his hatless short hair, and the majority of his Caucasian face. Researchers claim that photogrammetric calculus methods locate the "badge man" near the foliage cover of a large oak tree on the grassy knoll, somewhere northeast of a 3.3' high cement retaining wall, behind the wooden picket fence north-south fence line, on the parking lot side, and elevated above the ground. A whitish spot slightly obscuring the "badge man" face is claimed to be the visual remnant of an already fired weapon muzzle blast, the bullet from which if fired at President Kennedy from his right front would have had to pass over the 3.3' high cement retaining wall.

Other researchers have claimed that the "badge man" image is the sun-reflected outline of a soda pop bottle sitting atop the cement retaining wall.

Mack has stated that he took a Moorman photocopy he obtained from a November 22 1963 United Press International first generation photograph negative to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1983. Upon scanning the Moorman photo UPI negative with high-resolution computer scanning equipment, then initially examining the "badge man" image, Mack has stated that the only two MIT examiners both agreed that the "badge man" image did show a human being. Mack further stated that the next day his Moorman polaroid materials were returned to him and he was told that further MIT examination of the photograph would not take place. Mack also had ITEK computer scan and examine the image in 1993. In 2000 Mack stated, "In a nutshell, every scientist who has worked on the image for me realized immediately that it was an image that looked very much like a person. However, no enhancement techniques have, or probably ever will have, been able to clarify the image significantly. Therefore, it is not conclusive, which is exactly what I have been saying since 1982."

In the 1980’s assassination researcher and photo expert Jack White (who testified to the House Select Committee on Assassinations) enhanced the immediate photograph area of the "badge man" with what White has described as clear photographic colored oils to illustrate the "badge man." White's enhancement first appeared publicly in the documentary The Men Who Killed Kennedy.

To the anatomical right of the supposed "badge man" some researchers claim there is also seen a second person, close self-proclaimed witness Gordon Arnold, who first claimed in 1978 that he was filming the motorcade while wearing his US Army uniform when a shot passed close to his left ear. A third person claimed by researchers to be seen is a construction hard hatted accomplice to "badge man's" anatomical left facing the general direction of the book depository.

Also claimed seen in the Moorman polaroid by many researchers is the hatted head of a person located about 9' west of the grassy knoll picket fence corner (a different location from the "badge man"). This image area is the exact same area where several overpass witnesses stated they observed smoke, where several of those smoke witnesses (and other witnesses) immediately ran to (seeing no one but finding hundreds of footprints in the mud directly behind a station wagon backed up to the picket fence that also had shoe-bottom mud scraped off onto the station wagon’s rear bumper, a noticeably inordinate amount of cigarette butts, and muddy footprints up on a picket fence cross-beam support).

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