Mr. Specter. So then the lesser damage on the Governor's wrist in and of itself indicates in your opinion——
Dr. Olivier. That it wasn't struck by a pristine bullet; yes.
Mr. Specter. Are there any other conclusions which flow from the experiments which you conducted on the wrist?
Dr. Olivier. We concluded that it wasn't struck by a pristine bullet. Also drew the conclusion that it was struck by an unstable bullet, a bullet at a much reduced velocity. The question that it brings up in my mind is if the same bullet that struck the wrist had passed through the Governor's chest, if the bullet that struck the Governor's chest had not hit anything else would it have been reduced low enough to do this, and I wonder, based on our work—it brings to mind the possibility the same bullet that struck the President striking the Governor would account for this more readily. I don't know, I don't think you can ever say this, but it is a very good possibility, I think more possible, more probable than not.
The Chairman. What is more probable than not, Doctor?
Dr. Olivier. In my mind at least, and I don't know the angles at which the things went or anything, it seems to me more probable that the bullet that hit the Governor's chest had already been slowed down somewhat, in order to lose enough velocity to strike his wrist and do no more damage than it did. I don't know how you would ever determine it exactly. I think the best approach is to find out the angles of flight, whether it is possible. But I have a feeling that it might have been.
The Chairman. It might have been?
Dr. Olivier. Yes.
The Chairman. The one that went through his chest went through his hand also.
Dr. Olivier. Yes; and also through the President.