First
Visit of Zapruder Film to NIPIC – Dino Brugioni
From
Wiki:
In a
video interview by Doug Horne, Dino Brugioni says that he and his team examined
the 8mm Zapruder film of the John F. Kennedy assassination the evening of
Saturday 23 November 1963 and into the morning of Sunday 24 November 1963, when
he was the weekend duty officer at the CIA's National Photographic
Interpretation Center. Dino and his team projected the film for two members of
the Secret Service several times, and they indicated which frames they wanted
prints made from, which in turn should be included on the briefing boards. Dino
indicated in the interview that he was positive that they had the original
film, and that when they projected it for the two members of the Secret
Service, it was the first time they had viewed the film. After creating the required
duplicate negatives from the desired frames, the film was returned the two
members of the Secret Service, and that at approximately 3 AM they left the
NPIC facility. He and his team then made up two identical sets of briefing
boards, one set for CIA Director John McCone and one for the Secret Service,
but both were eventually delivered to the CIA Director who would in turn
provide a set to the Secret Service. Each set was consisted of two boards,
hinged in the middle, and contained between 12 and 15 prints of frames from the
film, with the frame number indicated on the board. Mr. Brugioni prepared
identical one sheet of notes that accompanied each set the briefing boards,
which included the name of each person who had seen the film and worked on the
production of the prints and briefing boards. When the work was complete, Dino
Brugioni reviewed the briefing boards and notes with his superior, Arthur
Lundahl, whom he had called and requested come to the facility. The briefing
boards and notes were then turned over to Arthur Lundahl.[10]
He said
he was not aware of a second examination of the film at NPIC the night of
Sunday 24 November and the early morning of Monday 25 November, by a completely
different team. Apparently the team that worked on the second examination was
given 16mm film and made up another, and possibly larger, series of frame
prints, and that another set of briefing boards was also created.[10]
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National Security Archive. Retrieved 2007-09-16.
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Roger (1967). To Move a Nation: The Politics of Foreign Policy in
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_QIuu6hsAc "The
Zapruder Film Mystery", Published on August 15, 2014
"Aerial
Photographs of Auschwitz". The Auschwitz Album. Yad Vashem: The
Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority. 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-16.
Brugioni,
Dino (January–March 1983). "Auschwitz
and Birkenau: Why the World War II Photo Interpreters Failed to Identify the
Extermination Complex". Military Intelligence. 9 (1):
50–55. Retrieved 2007-09-16.
The Two NPIC Zapruder Film Events:
Signposts Pointing to the Film's Alteration
Signposts Pointing to the Film's Alteration
by Douglas P. Horne
Download the files:
Transcript
of the ARRB Staff Interview of Homer A. McMahon (Former CIA/NPIC Employee) here
The Two
NPIC Zapruder Film Events: Signposts Pointing to the Film's Alteration here
NPIC Panels
I-IV here
Frame
Assignment Analysis here
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