The Autopsy
Los Angeles Coroner Thomas Noguchi conducted the
official autopsy on the body of Robert Francis Kennedy on the morning of
July 6. This very experienced coroner removed one intact bullet and
fragments from another. The operation was witnessed by, according to
writer Dan Moldea, "three forensic pathologists from the Armed
Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington and by two of Noguchi’s
associates."
In his resulting 62-page report, Noguchi stated that the
shot that killed RFK "had entered through the mastoid bone, an inch
behind the right ear and had traveled upward to sever the branches of
the superior cerebral artery." The largest fragment of that bullet
lodged in the brain stem.
Another shot had penetrated Kennedy’s right armpit and
exited through the upper portion of his chest at a 59-degree angle. The
coroner determined that the senator’s arm must have been upraised when
that bullet entered.
Yet, another, a third, shot entered one-and-a-half
inches below the previous one and stopped in the neck near the sixth
cervical. This is the bullet that was found intact.
LAPD diagram showing the three wounds
inflicted on Senator Kennedy

(California State Archives)
Checking Kennedy’s clothing, for other telltale signs,
Noguchi followed the path between two bullet holes in his suit coat and
announced that a fourth bullet had been fired at the senator. It
entered and exited the fabric without touching the senator.
The autopsy, having clarified what bullet actually
killed the public’s beloved Bobby, also created a controversy. Sirhan
Sirhan had carried an Iver-Johnson eight-cylinder handgun, the
chamber having expended all eight cylinders – in other words, fired
all eight bullets. Four of those had been fired at RFK – the public
accepted that – but there were five others who had been wounded
in the pantry. Elizabeth Evans, Ira Goldstein, Paul Schrade, Irwin
Stroll and William Weisel. Because there were more victims than
accounted-for bullets, a "second gunman" theory was born.
The LAPD responded, reminding the public that some of
the bullets that fell the people passed through their bodies or grazed
them. The one that passed through Kennedy, for instance, probably went
on to hit Paul Schrade standing nearby. After all, the pantry had been a
virtual beehive of bullets. In essence, what the LAPD was telling the
public was this: Forget about any "second gunman" theory.
Every one of Sirhan Sirhan’s .22 caliber copper-coated hollow-point
bullets was accounted for. No less, no more.
To fully illustrate, LAPD’s DeWayne A. Wolfer, chief
criminalist of the Scientific Research Division, issued a
bullet-accountability report that, in summary, reads:
-
Bullet #6: passed through Goldstein’s pants leg,
struck the cement floor, and, ricocheted onto Irwin Stroll’s left
leg.
Much to Wolfer’s anger, however, Noguchi responded
that, despite his efforts, albeit well presented and no doubt well
researched, there was really no way to accurately trace the flight
pattern of so many bullets.
One more issue remained, one that neither Noguchi, the
LAPD, nor the witnesses at the crime scene could explain – and one
that continues to haunt theorists and historians of the assassination to
this day. The shot that both Noguchi and the Los Angeles conclude killed
Kennedy – the one that entered the back of his neck, fragmented upon
impact and lodged in his brain stem – was fired so close that it left
thick powder burns on the skin. Coroner Noguchi estimates (and the LAPD
concurs) that the shot was fired at a range no more distant than
one-and-a-half inches. Yet, according to all witnesses, Sirhan Sirhan
shot in front of Kennedy and, as far as anyone knew, the senator
never had the chance to turn his back towards his hunter.
Even though Noguchi remained tight-lipped and diplomatic
at the time, in his biography that he penned a decade later – entitled
Coroner -- he wrote, "Until more is precisely known…the
existence of a second gunman remains a possibility. Thus, I have never
said that Sirhan Sirhan killed Robert Kennedy."