So now you are ignoring the conflicting witness accounts? And I was going from the expert witnesses that know more about forensics and autopsies than either you or me, whose overall statement were that the wounds were consistent with someone reaching for a gun and/or not raising his hands. There have been conflicting reports all along, including about this. I am saying that I am nowhere near enough of an expert to make that determination and ignore the experts' opinions. If you are comfortable enough in your knowledge of forensics and autopsies to allow you to figure out which one is absolutely correct then more power to you. I am saying there is more than enough dissension and evidence on either side to create doubt in either account.
When you refer to "conflicting witness accounts", that means for any actual recreation of events, some of the witness accounts will have to be discarded. If that were not true, the accounts would not be conflicting to begin with. We have witness accounts that described arms raised, and one witness account that does not, which happens to be the shooter.
There is some talk about a second witness to Wilson's version of events, by an anonymous caller named Josie:
https://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-ferguson-witness-accounts-20140821-story.html
Noticed that's based on a report from CNN. However, in the original CNN story (
link), Josie "identified herself as the officer's friend"; she is not a witness after all.
So, the only witness who saw the whole event, and does not described Brown as having his arms raised, is Wilson, the police officer. If Wilson were not a police officer, I'd wager you would not find his testimony credible,since Eilson obviously has so much to lose.
I agree we should accept the expert's opinions. In particular, we should accept the opinion that, of the four bullets that struck the right arm, one of them almost certainly did not enter the arm when Wilson's hands were raised. That was contents of your link, and I accept that opinion. ONE of the FOUR bullets died not strike Wilson's arms while they were raised. It could have happened during a struggle for the gun in Wilson's car, or when Brown was running away; I have no reason to disagree with either version. Now, will you accept the experts findings about the other three bullets, that they do match the notion that Wilson's arms were raised?
Sorry if this is beating a dead horse, but I want to make this clear: your first link from the Washington Post says "Judy Melinek, a forensic pathologist in San Francisco who reviewed the autopsy for the Post-Dispatch, told the paper that one of the officer’s shots hit Brown’s forearm and traveled from the back of the arm to the inner arm,", again, ONE of the FOUR bullets. I accept that, when *that particular bullet* was fired, Brown's arms were not raised. There are three other bullets that entered Brown's arm, all of which are consistent with Brown's arms being raised (and not consistent with Brown charging Wilson, unless you think he was charging with hands raised). Will you accept the expert opinion on those three bullets?