Colonel Finck. No, sir; for the reason that to determine the caliber you need the entire bullet, or at least an entire portion. You need a portion of the bullet showing the entire diameter, and I was not shown that. I was shown a fragment which represented a very small portion of the original bullet. Therefore, at that time I could not say anything on the possible original caliber.
Mr. McCloy. You examined no fragment which did contain those characteristics?
Colonel Finck. No, sir; I did not see any entire bullet or bullet showing the entire diameter.
The Chairman. Congressman Ford?
Representative Ford. I believe you testified, Colonel, that you concurred in the previous testimony by Commander Humes and Commander Boswell, and that you were one of the co-authors of the autopsy. At any time during this process where you were conducting the autopsy, was there any disagreement between any one of you three, any difference of opinion as to anything involved in the autopsy?
Colonel Finck. No, sir.
Representative Ford. There has been complete unanimity on what you saw, what you did, and what you have reported?
Colonel Finck. Yes, sir.
The Chairman. Senator Cooper?
Senator Cooper. Colonel, I would like for you to look at Exhibit 388 and at the possible trajectory of the bullet which entered President Kennedy's head at A and then mark it as a possible point of exit by "out". You remember there was testimony about a portion of the bullet from point A to the place on the diagram marked "fragment" where a fragment was found. I would like to ask if it is possible that the trajectory of the bullet, from the point of origin, could have been A to this point marked "fragment" as well as from A to the place marked "out"?