M2 Machine Gun? .45 or was it .50 caliber high velocity round found denied?
Posted byEdward Paul DoneganNovember 27, 2022Posted inUncategorizedEditM2 Machine Gun? .45 or was it .50 caliber high velocity round found denied?
They had a simple design and very low production cost, making them effective insurgency weapons for resistance groups, and they continue to see usage to this day by irregular military forces.
?It looked like a giant mole hole top but I have never seen one so long ..” high velocity round impacts dirt, bulled picked up and denied, described as .45 caliber, limo hole too.
Numerous witness to NEW holes in Limo, curb, dirt, other areas.
Railroad Swtiching Yard has sniper’s eye view. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_of_John_F._Kennedy#/media/File:DealeyPlazaAerial.jpg
The STEN (or Sten gun) is a family of British submachine guns chambered in 9×19mm which were used extensively by British and Commonwealth forces throughout World War II and the Korean War. They had a simple design and very low production cost, making them effective insurgency weapons for resistance groups, and they continue to see usage to this day by irregular military forces. The Sten served as the basis for the Sterling submachine gun, which replaced the Sten in British service until the 1990s, when it, and all other submachine guns, were replaced by the SA80.
The Sten is a select fire, blowback-operated weapon which mounts its magazine on the left. Sten is an acronym, from the names of the weapon’s chief designers, Major Reginald V. Shepherd and Harold J. Turpin, and “En” for the Enfield factory.[9][b] Over four million Stens in various versions were made in the 1940s, making it the second most produced submachine gun of the Second World War, after the Soviet PPSh-41.
Posted byEdward Paul DoneganNovember 27, 2022Posted inUncategorizedEditM2 Machine Gun? .45 or was it .50 caliber high velocity round found denied?
From the Railroad Switching Yard ABOVE the freeway Charles Harrelson, E. Howard Hunt, and Frank STurgis open up on the Limo with an M2 machie gun high muzzle velcoicyt 2.9k and hit JFK BELOW the kneck, possibly through window.
Published by Edward Paul Donegan
Civil libertarian https://archive.org/download/genoracketeering_202001/JulyDistUSSS.zip View more posts

?It looked like a giant mole hole top but I have never seen one so long ..” high velocity round impacts dirt, bulled picked up and denied, described as .45 caliber, limo hole too.
Numerous witness to NEW holes in Limo, curb, dirt, other areas.




Railroad Swtiching Yard has sniper’s eye view.
https://youtu.be/OEYS_jPUD2c Three hobos
The STEN (or Sten gun) is a family of British submachine guns chambered in 9×19mm which were used extensively by British and Commonwealth forces throughout World War II and the Korean War. They had a simple design and very low production cost, making them effective insurgency weapons for resistance groups, and they continue to see usage to this day by irregular military forces. The Sten served as the basis for the Sterling submachine gun, which replaced the Sten in British service until the 1990s, when it, and all other submachine guns, were replaced by the SA80.
The Sten is a select fire, blowback-operated weapon which mounts its magazine on the left. Sten is an acronym, from the names of the weapon’s chief designers, Major Reginald V. Shepherd and Harold J. Turpin, and “En” for the Enfield factory.[9][b] Over four million Stens in various versions were made in the 1940s, making it the second most produced submachine gun of the Second World War, after the Soviet PPSh-41.

