For the bullet to go through the neck and then supposedly the bullet hitting Connolly in the back has to be done by an extremely trained and experienced marksman at ground level. The master marksmen who were unable to duplicate Oswald's shooting accuracy support this claim. .
For the three shots there has to three bangs from the gun, but many eyewitnesses such as Betty Oliver say that there were at lease four to five shots that was heard. This means that there was more than just one assassin, because there were only three shell cases on the 6th floor of the Texas School Book Depository building. The Warren Commission took the magic bullet theory, as the only one, which was able to sustain the fact that there were three shell cases in the book depository. .
When detectives and policemen went to search the School Book Depository they found a sniper's nest. In the sniper's nest there were three empty cartridges, but no rifle. The rifle was found at the other end of the building hidden in between two piles of book. The detective at the scene noticed that the cartridges were in a neat line side by side with about equal space in between each cartridge, "It seems like they were deliberately put like that". If the bullets were fired from the rifle the cartridges would be all over the place. But co-incidentally they were put in a neat order showing that the sniper had time to waste time or they were originally empty cartridges but put in that pattern. .
A further mystery surrounds Lee Harvey Oswald. Thirty seconds after the shooting a police officer claimed he saw Oswald sitting in the 2nd floor cafeteria drinking a coke. That means Oswald hid the gun at the other end of the 6th floor dodging mountains of books and then running down four floors in less than 30 seconds. The police officer said he was not puffing or sweating. If he was not puffed it means he had not been on the sixth floor and therefore cannot be the assassin.